Quote from: Soeman on March 08, 2010, 10:10:39 PM
I've got a powerhead that pushes water down a bottle with the bottom cut off, into which I inject the CO2.
The CO2 has difficulty passing the sponge
I used to block the bottom of the bottle, so almost all CO2 is dissolved. An advantage with this system is that at night
And do you put the powerhead / bottle with sponge on bottom in a corner of your tank?
Do you have a picture to show me how its done? Im the visual type of guy :P
I use pretty much the same setup, minus a different reactor / diffuser.
Also I use 2 yeast bottles (3L each). One feeds into the other, the other outputs through a winemaker airlock (bubble-counter), then a two-way valve plastic (http://www.bigalsonline.ca/BigAlsCA/ctl3664/cp17337/si1316901/cl0/leesplastic2wayvalve2pk), then to the reactor.
The cheapo plastic valve works ok for me; I close it fully, then slowly open up until I get desired bubble-count. So far it does an okay job at regulating CO
2 flow (without the valve my reactor -- a Taam Rio RVT with venturi -- pulls hard enough to create negative pressure in the yeast bottles).
I'm happy with the bottles: they are 3L water jugs I bought at Metro for 1.37$ each, they have big caps which makes it easy to drill 2-4 holes through. Depending on the yeast mixture they will last about 2-3 weeks. I recharge one of them in every weekend when I do my WC, sometime I skip a recharge and just give both bottles a good shake.
My current mixture:
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 tsp soda
- 1 tsp ammonia
- 2 tsp unflavored soy protein mix
- 1 sm packet of champagne yeast for start, then 1/3 - 1/2 every recharge
When I recharge, I empty 90% of the old mix and keep the yeast/protein gunk that sits at the bottom.
Then add 1.5L warm water (40-50c), mix-in sugar + soda + ammonia + protein mix, shake like madness.
Then add 0.5L cold water (bring down the solution to 25-30c), then add new yeast.
Quote from: ordi260 on March 08, 2010, 10:32:53 PM
Any ideas on how to make a pressure release valve???
What I'm going to try this week:
- get a third 3L jug
- drill small hole at the bottom of the jug
- drill 2 holes in cap; one is input from the 2 yeast bottles, one is output through my bubble-counter -> reactor
- put an empty party balloon on the nozzle, screw cap on top.
What I hope will happen is that, when I close the output valve at night, the CO
2 will slowly fill in the balloon, which will expand into the empty jug (need a hole in the jug to expel air and let the balloon expand). Then in the morning, I re-open the valve just a little, and the balloon will empty out from CO2 buildup during the night.
The downside is that I need to close / open the valve every night and morning. No biggie. Until I get bored :)