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Unread 04/26/2013, 03:25 PM   #1
insomniac2k2
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LaCl Reactor

Just finished my testing with a LaCl reactor that I made. It has nothing less than stellar results. Much thanks to Gary for his great LaCl thread:
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/sh....php?t=1474839

It inspired me to throw this together. And im so happy with it, I will likely never go back to GFO.

Go read up Gary's thread, and also see my post with further explanation: http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/sh...&postcount=932

I drafted up a visual explanation on how mine works. It works so well, that at this moment, I wouldn't change a thing.

I have it setup to remove phosphates very slowly. My goal is to reduce the total amount of LaCl that enters my DT to a bare minimum. So far, it seems to be doing just that.

Forgot to mention: I flipped the flow on the first BRS reactor. The feed pump feeds into what's normally the outlet. I did this because of the way that they are Designed. This allowed me to add a tube inside the reactor that feeds the tank water and LaCl mix further down in the reactor and then makes it travel upwards and out towards the second reactor.

The second reactor is normal Inlet because it allows the filter floss cartridge to do its job.


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Last edited by insomniac2k2; 04/26/2013 at 04:14 PM.
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Unread 04/26/2013, 03:42 PM   #2
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What are you using for the reaction chamber and filter chamber?


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Unread 04/26/2013, 03:44 PM   #3
Gary Majchrzak
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Gary who?



good to see others taking this idea and running with it!


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Unread 04/26/2013, 03:48 PM   #4
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Reaction chamber is just LaCl dilute and tank water mix. It then runs into the filter chamber for further "reaction" and then filters upwards and through densely packed filter floss. Phase 3 is the direct inlet to the skimmer.

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What are you using for the reaction chamber and filter chamber?



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Unread 04/26/2013, 03:50 PM   #5
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I couldn't help it. It's good stuff. Permanent Phosphate control for pennies on the dollar compared to GFO w/ less maintenance!

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good to see others taking this idea and running with it!



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Unread 04/26/2013, 03:58 PM   #6
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No, I mean, what sort of container did you use for the reaction chamber?


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Unread 04/26/2013, 04:11 PM   #7
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Oh, sorry. Im using standard BRS reactors: http://www.bulkreefsupply.com/catalo.../view/id/1655/. On the top reactor (last reactor), I use the BRS Cartridge http://www.bulkreefsupply.com/brs-re...ard-shell.html


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Unread 04/26/2013, 04:13 PM   #8
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Nice, I'm familiar with those. I actually have a 2 stage reactor I use for carbon and GFO. What do you use for a dosing pump?


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Unread 04/26/2013, 04:17 PM   #9
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Keep in mind that if you use a dual reactor, you will not be able to do it quite like I did. I edited the original post to explain why.

I use the BRS 1.1 ML dosing pump(had it laying around).

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Nice, I'm familiar with those. I actually have a 2 stage reactor I use for carbon and GFO. What do you use for a dosing pump?



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Unread 04/26/2013, 05:14 PM   #10
Gary Majchrzak
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perhaps someday soon

it will be more common to see LC reactors than GFO reactors




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Unread 04/26/2013, 05:27 PM   #11
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I believe so. They are much easier and cheaper to maintain. The media is as close to free as it can get. You can use 10 cents worth or pillow stuffing and less than $1 worth of LaCl for a months treatment. I predict that the cost of my maintenance dose to be less than 10 cents a month.

That, and when done right, it is bound and exported out of the water immediately.

The caveat now is that IMO, you will never want to run your phosphates down close to zero (which you can easily do). You wouldn't want to have too much LaCl floating around in your system, should it escape your skimmer. You will need to test phosphates more often (every few weeks or so) to make sure of it.

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it will be more common to see LC reactors than GFO reactors




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Unread 04/26/2013, 06:50 PM   #12
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Been toying with trying lanthinum for a while. Might give this a shot. I wonder if I could still use my dual reactor by running it in reverse so I could do that thing with the tube.


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Unread 04/26/2013, 06:56 PM   #13
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While im sure that you could run it in reverse, and you would get good results, I would not. This would run the first stage immediately into the filter floss, and not allowing for the middle between the 2 (More mixing/reaction time).

You may just be able to modify the inside of your inlet side and retro in a piece of tubing. Maybe you will get lucky and the OD of a standard piece of tubing will fit. From that point forward, everything else would be the same.

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Been toying with trying lanthinum for a while. Might give this a shot. I wonder if I could still use my dual reactor by running it in reverse so I could do that thing with the tube.



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Unread 04/27/2013, 08:20 AM   #14
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I hate that I can't edit the original post after an hour..... Anyway, I forgot to add a check valve between the dosed and the T where the LaCl is injected. This keeps from putting back pressure on the doser.

I should also add that after doing the math again, I came to better numbers (if that's possible). My estimated maintenance dose will cost me 80 cents total for 180 days of dosing. For me (perpetually high phosphates), that's a savings of about 500 bucks a year.

The larger the tank, the better the returns.



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Unread 04/27/2013, 10:02 PM   #15
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I imagine I'd only be missing a few inches of tubing with a dual reactor. I had a thought though. I already have 2 of the cartridges you linked from BRS. The cartridge basically acts the same way as your tube does. It makes the water flow to the bottom of the canister then up. I wouldn't have to modify my current reactor setup much at all. I'd simply have to get a dosing pump and T into the line feeding the reactor.

I do however keep activated carbon in there. I would like to keep running it. Anyone know if it would bind the lanthinum and hinder the effect? Would the low flow for the lanthinum reaction make the carbon pretty much useless?


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Unread 04/28/2013, 09:30 AM   #16
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True. If you us the plastic chamber, that would seem good enough to me. I'd be curious to see if the louvers would clog up quicker or at all in reactor 1 due to less settle time. Should work though.

The carbon question may be trickier. If I were to run carbon in a 2 stage, I'd run filter floss in stage 1 and carbon in stage 2. But I would not be content with the minimal reaction time that water has before it enters the filter floss.

I have yet to research the effects of LaCl and carbon, but deduction tells me that it should be a good thing in the final stages.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jrp1588 View Post
I imagine I'd only be missing a few inches of tubing with a dual reactor. I had a thought though. I already have 2 of the cartridges you linked from BRS. The cartridge basically acts the same way as your tube does. It makes the water flow to the bottom of the canister then up. I wouldn't have to modify my current reactor setup much at all. I'd simply have to get a dosing pump and T into the line feeding the reactor.

I do however keep activated carbon in there. I would like to keep running it. Anyone know if it would bind the lanthinum and hinder the effect? Would the low flow for the lanthinum reaction make the carbon pretty much useless?


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Unread 04/28/2013, 09:57 AM   #17
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Perhaps keep the first stage open, then in the second stage, full with floss almost tip the top, then place my carbon on top. So all so speaking of floss, are you sure it filters the precipitate well enough? I believe a 5 micron filter sock is the usual method.


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Unread 04/28/2013, 10:30 AM   #18
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Sounds like something that should work fine. It would definitely be worth a try to see how it works out.

As for if it is catching all the precipitate. No, I'm sure that it is not. I do see some making it into my skimmer. Minimal, but some. But I am pretty confident that the skimmer is a perfect final stage of removal.

Keep in mind that the more clogged the filter floss becomes, the more efficient it becomes. My next run will be slightly more compacted floss, but I'm not even remotely concerned that the precip is not being exported as its configured now.

Maybe ill give the carbon thing a try, but I fear that without the ability to tumble, it will become clogged and inefficient quickly. Ill see what I can come up with to create a separate stage above the floss.


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Perhaps keep the first stage open, then in the second stage, full with floss almost tip the top, then place my carbon on top. So all so speaking of floss, are you sure it filters the precipitate well enough? I believe a 5 micron filter sock is the usual method.



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Unread 04/28/2013, 12:09 PM   #19
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You got me curious, so im giving it a try. At first glance, I don't like it. I put carbon at the top of the floss. As soon as i pressurized the reactors, it pushed the filter floss right up and locked the carbon right at the top. Which also de-compacted the floss.

The carbon definitely causes more back pressure. I had to turn the water pressure up about double to what it was before. I'll watch it the next few days.

Here is a pic of what came out of the reactor, and the carbon test on the right:


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Unread 04/28/2013, 01:24 PM   #20
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I don't believe carbon is supposed to be tumbled. It breaks up when tumbled. So you usually put your floss in pretty loosely?


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Unread 04/28/2013, 01:49 PM   #21
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I always shoot for a light tumble. The problem is that you want to pack the floss in tightly as possible. The water will compact it over time.

When you add carbon on the top like I just did, you won't be able to compact the floss near as much.

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I don't believe carbon is supposed to be tumbled. It breaks up when tumbled. So you usually put your floss in pretty loosely?



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Unread 04/28/2013, 04:10 PM   #22
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very interesting. I had been trying to come up with something to dose LC. Currently I just drip a diluted mixture directly into my skimmer intake a few times per week.


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Unread 04/28/2013, 07:34 PM   #23
insomniac2k2
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If you have the reactors, give it a try. You can get the floss by going to wallmart pillow stuffing. There is a bunch of threads around here that mention which one to get.

Make sure to order a check valve from BRS or somewhere else. You will need it.


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Unread 04/29/2013, 08:58 AM   #24
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Okay, now that I have refreshed myself on the large thread, I like your set up even more. I have enough stuff laying around to make one as well.


Do you plan on running this 24/7? in place of GFO? There seems to be some concern that below certain levels, LC does not do as well as GFO.

If I understand it correctly, the brief overview is that once the po4 bottoms out, the LC begins to strip out alkalinity (carbonate) and the La is free in the water column.


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Unread 04/29/2013, 09:23 AM   #25
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Yes, I will be running it 24/7 or until PO4 reduction is no longer necessary. I do not think that day will be coming anytime soon. My whole intention of this reactor is to maintain a healthy level of PO4, not eradicate it. My "healthy" level is between .04 and .08.

I've already pretty much figured out my maintenance dose to maintain 0 loss or gain. It needs a tad of adjustment, but I'm now on that maintenance dose, and gaining PO4 at a rate of about .01 every 4 days. This is a good thing, in my eyes. Id rather gain slowly and just tweak the dose schedule now and then, rather than the alternative of striping all PO4 and having extra LaCl in the system, causing havok.

So far, I have noticed next to no ALK drop in my tank. BUT, I do vinegar/KALK dose through a stirrer, fed by my ATO.

I should also add that I've noticed quite a nice polishing effect on the water since I started this little project (filter floss).

Quote:
Originally Posted by mc-cro View Post
Okay, now that I have refreshed myself on the large thread, I like your set up even more. I have enough stuff laying around to make one as well.


Do you plan on running this 24/7? in place of GFO? There seems to be some concern that below certain levels, LC does not do as well as GFO.

If I understand it correctly, the brief overview is that once the po4 bottoms out, the LC begins to strip out alkalinity (carbonate) and the La is free in the water column.



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