I'm interested in Alkatronic / Tridents / ..., but the vendor lock-in and the high prices make me very gun shy on getting one. Over the psat months I keep coming across various hacky things where people built their own, and I've found that intriguing. In particular, I was reading the details of the DIY Alkalinity test guide, and doing a PH + Hydrochloric acid alkalinity test actually is pretty straightforward. That appears to be what others found, including the guy who built Alkabot.
With all that knowledge, I decided it'd be another fun little project to DIY build my own, and now I'm going to track it here. The main differences I want to do versus some of the others:
With all that knowledge, I decided it'd be another fun little project to DIY build my own, and now I'm going to track it here. The main differences I want to do versus some of the others:
- goal is a toy project for me, with some documentation if someone else wants to do it, not a business or whatever
- I want this to be easy to put together, with as many purchasable parts as possible. I am not interested in starting from complete scratch and DIY building peristaltic pump heads and blah blah. That certainly will mean I pay more money, but I'd like to spend my time learning the electronics & tuning versus dealing with 3d printer tolerances (though I will eventually print a container and such).
- In future versions maybe I'll have a buyX versus buildY variation
- Overall cost should be less than a Trident. If this starts spiraling into $$$ I'll abort. My current thinking is the parts are going to be < $100, with the total cost being $100-$200 because I'll buy some misc parts in bulk for future projects (eg extra silicone tubing, filament, stepper controller boards, ...)
- I want the testing device to focus on fault tolerance, and be dumb. I'll probably do the controlling from a raspberry pi running reef-pi, but I don't really expect it to be tied to reef-pi itself