A calcium reactor is one of the most powerful tools for maintaining stable calcium and alkalinity in a reef tank. But like any precision system, it needs to be properly tuned to perform at its best.
In this guide, we’ll walk you through:
- How a calcium reactor works
- How to fine-tune it step by step
- A real example setup
⚙️ How a Calcium Reactor Works
A calcium reactor dissolves media by lowering the internal pH using CO₂.
This process:
- Releases calcium
- Releases alkalinity (KH)
- Feeds it back into your tank via effluent
👉 The goal is controlled dissolution, not maximum output.
🎯 What You’re Trying to Achieve
Maintain stable alkalinity (KH) in your tank — not to constantly increase it.
Ideal Targets:
- Tank KH: 7.5 – 8.5 dKH
- Reactor pH: 6.3 – 6.7
- Effluent: steady, consistent flow
🧪 Step-by-Step: How to Fine-Tune Your Reactor
1️⃣ Set a Baseline
Start with conservative settings:
- CO₂: 2–3 bubbles per second
- Effluent: slow, steady stream
- Pump speed: 60–70% power
Let the system run for 24–48 hours before making adjustments.
2️⃣ Check Reactor pH
This is your most important indicator.
- If pH is above 6.7 → not enough CO₂ → increase slightly
- If pH is below 6.3 → too much CO₂ → reduce
3️⃣ Monitor Tank KH Daily
This tells you whether your reactor is matched to your tank demand.
- KH dropping → increase CO₂ slightly
- KH rising → reduce CO₂ or increase effluent flow
👉 Make small adjustments only and wait 24 hours between changes.
4️⃣ Fine Tune Effluent Flow
Think of it like this:
- CO₂ = strength of solution
- Effluent = how much you deliver
If you need more output:
- Increase CO₂ OR
- Increase effluent flow slightly
Real Example (500L Reef Tank)
System:
- Tank: 500L (CADE S2 1200)
- Reactor: Seatorch SM-80X
- Mixed reef
Final dial-in settings:
- CO₂: ~2.5–3 bubbles/sec
- Effluent: steady thin stream (~50 mL/min)
- Pump: ~65%
- Reactor pH: ~6.5
- Tank KH: stable at 8.3
👉 Result:
- Stable parameters
- Consistent coral growth
- Minimal daily adjustment
Every tank is different. If you need help tuning your system:
Contact us anytime — we’re happy to help you get the most out of your setup.
Next blog we will takling common mistakes to be avoid. Stay turn!