I will reply a bit later to the whole thing, but:
- Calcium will precipitate for most of it with citric acid, especially in concentrates
- Citric acid in tropical conditions will promote bacterial rot....
- It would be important to know the source of the nitrogen in the compound fertilizer, ammonium, urea or nitrate. Nitrate are a no-go in tropical conditions ( and in many others after all...), that's why 100% of all the growers from Taiwan to Indonesia use urea-based fertilizers...
- You definitely need 2 tanks, with 2 injectors, one tank acidified will have just a lot of precipitate, except if the pH is adjusted to 2.5-3, in which case you need a second pump to add potassium hydroxide before watering...
- K-Lite in tropical countries would have disastrous effects, there has been many tests done, and plants do need a lot of potassium. The K-Lite fantasy came from just trials, it grows it does not... My experience, and others ccome from leaf mineral analysis, especially after the plants bloom. Tropical countries as well are much more demanding in terms of feeding (that's why 1 to 2 grams/L of fertilizer is common in Thailand, including for Paphiopedilum).... and especially potassium...