I've never used overhead stirring with a pH meter. It's often used for viscous liquids that are too thick to be stirred by magnets. I wouldn't imagine it would be difficult to set one up on one side of the beaker and the pH meter on the other, but the stirring might be a bit more uneven and you'd probably want them both to be well secured so they don't interfere with each other. There are a few different types in use. The type with a rod through a ball joint connected off center to a gear works well to get a wide stir path through a smaller neck vessel, but otherwise is a big pain compared to a simple paddle type.
Here's a thread with a few made from drills or dremel type drives...
Another thing I see is the laminar flow hood section. My advice on that is that laminar flow does not work well for micro. People use them plenty, but I don't feel like blowing your work directly into your face is really a very good practice.
Biosafety cabs. are too complicated to DIY IMHO. I don't think you could really get one working right without an excessive amount of research, work, and testing. There's nothing special about laminar flow and people waste way too much time trying to achieve it.
The "Portable Laminar Flow Hood by antoniraj" in your guide will rather obviously not achieve laminar flow. The filter must be the entire size of the workspace to get that. The border around the filter on your pics will create a pocket of still air behind it and turbulize the air from there on out. If you drilled pegs into the dados to have the front partly open during work it should still work fine, but isn't "laminar flow". The plenum also doesn't seem well designed. You need a plenum because you can't blow air directly on the filter or you will get an uneven pressure across the filter and again have turbulence and hence no laminar flow.
The design here is also not well done...
This design has a few errors. The pre-filter should be on the exhaust side of the blower. Blowers are designed to push air, not suck it. And you loose the utility of the pre-filter to smooth the air and prevent it from blowing directly on the HEPA filter. The only time you should have a prefilter on the intake side is to reduce the flow of oversized blowers, and this is usually done by blocking off part of the intake rather than filtering it since filter flow changes over the life of the filter as it becomes plugged. The design also has the blower blowing directly against a wall perpendicular to the filter, again this will cause uneven static pressure across the HEPA. This design looks like it also has a filter smaller than the work area. Perhaps the worst part is that the blower is enclosed inside a box, which could be a fire hazard if the blower is overdriven or the prefilter clogs up.
The FreshCap design looks similar to what a lot of mycologists build, but I've never understood the focus on laminar flow. It's extra work and there's a lot more potential problems and pitfalls. If you put sides and a sliding front on the unit you don't need laminar flow and can use much cheaper and much smaller HEPA filters.
The design I use is made just like a fume hood in reverse. There's a furnace blower on the top pointed down, bolted to a piece of plywood. Between the plywood and the plenum I have a layer of bedroll foam, and inset in the top of the plenum is a standard furnace filter. The plenum is stuffed with polyfil (polypropylene pillow stuffing). Beneath the plenum there is another layer of bedroll foam. Two small HEPA filters are recessed into the top of the hood body about 3/4 of the way to the back and caulked into place. They are evenly spaced side to side. Two dados from top to bottom near the front of the work area hold a piece of plexiglass which is reinforced top and bottom with a strip of 90 degree angle aluminum running full length, minus the dado depth. In the dados are holes every few inches that I insert a shelf peg or pin into to set the height of the plexiglass front.
The idea with the bedroll foam is to insulate the hood from blower vibrations. None of the parts are bolted together and rely on the weight of the blower to maintain a seal between them without requiring a direct link that would transmit vibration. The plenum only needs to be large enough to cover the HEPAs and support the blower. Not being bolted on also makes for easy access to the filters and polyfil. The purpose of the polyfil is both as prefilter and to smooth the airflow to the HEPAs. You use the unit just like a fume hood with just enough handspace open in the front as is needed.
This design works well for me... inside a room in dusty warehouse. I've verified it a number of times by exposing petri dishes of PDA in the four corners. With 5-8 min exposures I occasionally (~25%) get 1 CFU (out of the 4 dishes). I think this is pretty good since I'd imagine that's near the efficiency of the HEPA filter given the exposure time, amount of airflow, surface area, and input air quality.
I used to keep track of contam rate, but it was insignificant enough that I stopped. I switched to a method where I expose a dish over the course of one block of hood work. That way I can estimate the air quality for each batch of work. I keep the dish while the work grows out to make sure there's no problem.
You can use a standalone HEPA filter to help clean the room air, but it also works well to just run the hood for awhile before beginning work.
I wrote a little also in this post...
Not sure if you have UV in the DIY guide, but I mention the tubes I use there.