I did not take any pictures but I used a small sump pump of about a 1500ltrs hr with a 16/22 mm up atomiser fitted to it.
The output of this went into a length of 22mm speedfit pipe .
This pipe had 3 "t" pieces in it and a 90* elbow on the end. This gave 4 outputs from the single pump output.
The outputs from the 22mm was reduced to 15mm which via short bits of hose were connected to 4 calcium reactors with no media inside them. These reactors are about 18" tall and 3 1/2" diameter.
The output from these reactors was again all joined together as the input was and fed to the input of my sump return pump.
It would without doubt reduce a lot of the misting in the tank, but what would not dissolve into the water would turn back into big bubbles by the time it got back to the main display.
I have found using a single atomiser on my tank is that I need it to go past the mist stage.
So I would need to run a pair of them , this would then allow me to run them producing a mist instead of fine bubbles.
This then could be fed into a pair of reactor chambers where it might well dissolve better.
As it cost me 45 quid each for the reactors I am not to keen to buy 4 more.
The other thing is while messing around with all this it caused huge fluctuation's of Co2 in my tank which has done no good at all.
I have ordered a second up atomiser and I will set this up alongside the one I have running. Once I have the CO2 flow rate correct for my set up using a pair of them then I will play with running the outputs into some reactors. To start with I will just run one of them into my 4 reactors , if this then gets rid of the misting from that one and no bubbles reform on the way back to the tank I will do the second one.
But on a side note if fitting a second in line atomiser reduces the bubble size to a mist then perhaps fitting more atomisers may be the answer and make the mist finer from each one ??
From my experience getting good Co2 round a 7x2x2 tank with lots of plant mass, huge bits of bog wood is a never ending battle.
Hope that helps you in some way
Simon