The first thing you need to know brick is what are your daily Calcium and Alk demands. Meaning, you need to test both each day or each two days for say a week and see how much each drop each day or each two days. Then you "tune" a Calcium reactor or Kalk unit or kalk drip to fit those needs. If one of those does not meet your needs you have to sup the tank by other means. Kalk is the preferred method as it adds nothing extra to the tank, which even Calcium reactors will do to a degree. However, in many systems Kalk is not enough to meet daily needs and in some systems a Calcium reactor is not enough. So, they use both or add a buffer or Caclium sup separately.
People will see a bigger drop in Alk for 3 reasons
1. The Alk is a low number, when compared to Calcium. i.e., 450 ppm Ca++ vs 8 DKH.So, itr is more noticeable.
2. There is allot more Ca++ in the water than Alk. If your Alk was 4 meq / l ( 11.2 dKH) and coral and abiotic precip takes 20 ppm Ca++ / 2.8 dkH, then the dKH would be zero but there is still 370 ppm Ca++ in the tank.
3. The Alk demand is ALWAYS more than the Ca++ demand. Meaning, other reactions use up Alk to try and help buffer the water from other reactions to help keep the pH in more check. And different systems have different demands. You can not really compare tanks.
Issues with Kalk and Reactors:
If your pH is good it can raise it to high with Kalk. Kalk does raise Alk but not as much as a Ca++ reactor, as it can't without serious issues. When Kalk is added it is adding what is called 1 alk unit and a Calcium reactor adds 2 Alk units. Advantage of Kalk over a reactor, in some systems, is it sucks out CO2 faster raising the pH and Caclium reactors usually have excessive CO2 which lowers the pH, as you are adding CO2 to the reactor.
If one can run a system on just kalk and it meets the daily needs that is great and the only way to go. However, you will not see this happen in a sps tanks, as all that Ca++ needed will drive that pH way to high if it is just Kalk. Here you go with a Calcium reactor and kalk sup, mostly for the Kalk sup to bring the pH back up to a better level. I will add that some sps tanks can run on just a calcium reactor. Again, different systems have different demands.
What ever system you choose it is always best to make sure that the Ca++, Mg++ and Alk are in-line FIRST. Meaning, if you had a Ca++ of 390 ppm and want it at 450 ppm and use just kalk your tank will be in big doo-do trouble. As, the pH will be through the roof.
So, what are you doing now for Ca++ and Alk ?