Hi All,
Knowing that there are several things that can and do affect PH I've decided to at least make the effort to remove excess CO2 from the equation if possible.
During the winter I seem to only be able to achieve a top PH of 8.02 and that's in the middle of the day. It drops down to 7.8 at night typically.
Anyway looking for opinions on the plan below specifically...
I have an Auto-Top off/ Auto WC rig that starts in my laundry room which is VERY open and aerated (my oil burner is in there too), comes through the wall via my pvc plumbing and into my sump.
What I want to do is take a big ole air pump and mount it somewhere in this well ventilated room and run regular airline tubing through the wall and on top of the pvc the same route and down into my sump.
The affect being that I'm driving out a lot of the CO2 build up from my home being closed up tight in the winter (and summer when AC is on) by pumping in that "fresh" air.
Anyone do this or tried it? Anything I'm not thinking of? Risks?
Thanks!
Knowing that there are several things that can and do affect PH I've decided to at least make the effort to remove excess CO2 from the equation if possible.
During the winter I seem to only be able to achieve a top PH of 8.02 and that's in the middle of the day. It drops down to 7.8 at night typically.
Anyway looking for opinions on the plan below specifically...
I have an Auto-Top off/ Auto WC rig that starts in my laundry room which is VERY open and aerated (my oil burner is in there too), comes through the wall via my pvc plumbing and into my sump.
What I want to do is take a big ole air pump and mount it somewhere in this well ventilated room and run regular airline tubing through the wall and on top of the pvc the same route and down into my sump.
The affect being that I'm driving out a lot of the CO2 build up from my home being closed up tight in the winter (and summer when AC is on) by pumping in that "fresh" air.
Anyone do this or tried it? Anything I'm not thinking of? Risks?
Thanks!
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