![]() |
Reactor blow out
2 Attachment(s)
I had all my ballasts burn out a week ago and thought I was done having problems.
Then whaaaat, my reactor blew up The only thing I can think of is the solinoid stuck and the co2 built up and pop! |
Thats intense! Its a fair size vessel could have caused some serious damage
|
Yowza!
|
Wow, sorry to hear.
Question: How are you controlling flow into and out of the reactor? I popped a reactor once by trying to feed it via a T'd line off my sump return. I was having issues with the flow being inconsistent so I was trying it with the needle valve on the input side of the reactor and on the outlet size of the reactor. I found with the needle valve on the input side I was still having inconsistent flow so I moved it to the output. A day later I found the whole thing split open with a huge mess on the floor. Lesson learned! Between the CO2 regulator's pressure setting and sump return pump, it can lead to enough internal pressure to stress the seams. I prefer to have the output of the reactor as free-flow, with the flow adjustments made as the water goes into the reactor. Anyhow hopefully you can get everything sorted out. |
I do have the input T'd off sump pump with needle valve. The needle valve was adjusted with the out put fully open with barely any effluent pressure.
I can tell the reactor over reacted because of the silty water left behind which would explain excessive co2 I ll start by ordering a new probe and fix the reactor I guess. Luckily I have a kalk dripper |
I tried once using a 60ml/min peristaltic pump to feed the reactor. Thought I had the feed problem licked once and for all until I learned that those pumps apparently don't last more than a couple months when being used for more than a couple minutes per day to dose something. :lol: Can't win!!
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 09:42 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.