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Nikki Casali
January 21st 05, 08:46 PM
It's a month since I started using a permanent pH probe to control my
tank's CO2 injections. The probe being used is made by AquaMedic. At the
the first calibration I used buffer solutions 7 and 10. The instructions
say to use 7 and 9. I used the 10 instead to adjust the calibration
curve. The calibrated probe's readings matched the colorimeter's readings.

It's a month later. Time to recalibrate. I first checked to see how far
the probe had drifted. It was less than .1 according to the buffer
solutions. In this calibration routine I used 7 and 9.18. Calibration
done I then placed the probe into the tank water. It read 6.85. The last
reading before calibration was 7.25. I now checked with the colorimeter
which said the tank was 7.3. The probe is now off by -0.4!

I recalibrated with 7 and the original 10. Still reads 6.85!

It seems to me that I have somehow trashed the probe by recalibrating
it. Is there anything I can do to recover the probe? A temporary
solution I have, before I can get a replacement, is to calibrate the
probe to the known tank pH. That is, placing the probe in the tank water
and adjusting it until it reads around about 7.3.

Anyone have a similar experience?

Nikki

Rick
January 21st 05, 10:05 PM
"Nikki Casali" > wrote in message
...
> It's a month since I started using a permanent pH probe to control my
> tank's CO2 injections. The probe being used is made by AquaMedic. At the
> the first calibration I used buffer solutions 7 and 10. The instructions
> say to use 7 and 9. I used the 10 instead to adjust the calibration
> curve. The calibrated probe's readings matched the colorimeter's readings.
>
> It's a month later. Time to recalibrate. I first checked to see how far
> the probe had drifted. It was less than .1 according to the buffer
> solutions. In this calibration routine I used 7 and 9.18. Calibration
> done I then placed the probe into the tank water. It read 6.85. The last
> reading before calibration was 7.25. I now checked with the colorimeter
> which said the tank was 7.3. The probe is now off by -0.4!
>
> I recalibrated with 7 and the original 10. Still reads 6.85!
>
> It seems to me that I have somehow trashed the probe by recalibrating
> it. Is there anything I can do to recover the probe? A temporary
> solution I have, before I can get a replacement, is to calibrate the
> probe to the known tank pH. That is, placing the probe in the tank water
> and adjusting it until it reads around about 7.3.
>
> Anyone have a similar experience?
>
> Nikki
>

without using the calibration mode simply check the PH level of the buffer
you are using. You are then using a known solution. If the meter reads
correctly then your water PH is 6.85.

Rick

Nikki Casali
January 21st 05, 11:15 PM
Rick wrote:

> "Nikki Casali" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>It's a month since I started using a permanent pH probe to control my
>>tank's CO2 injections. The probe being used is made by AquaMedic. At the
>>the first calibration I used buffer solutions 7 and 10. The instructions
>>say to use 7 and 9. I used the 10 instead to adjust the calibration
>>curve. The calibrated probe's readings matched the colorimeter's readings.
>>
>>It's a month later. Time to recalibrate. I first checked to see how far
>>the probe had drifted. It was less than .1 according to the buffer
>>solutions. In this calibration routine I used 7 and 9.18. Calibration
>>done I then placed the probe into the tank water. It read 6.85. The last
>>reading before calibration was 7.25. I now checked with the colorimeter
>>which said the tank was 7.3. The probe is now off by -0.4!
>>
>>I recalibrated with 7 and the original 10. Still reads 6.85!
>>
>>It seems to me that I have somehow trashed the probe by recalibrating
>>it. Is there anything I can do to recover the probe? A temporary
>>solution I have, before I can get a replacement, is to calibrate the
>>probe to the known tank pH. That is, placing the probe in the tank water
>>and adjusting it until it reads around about 7.3.
>>
>>Anyone have a similar experience?
>>
>>Nikki
>>
>
>
> without using the calibration mode simply check the PH level of the buffer
> you are using. You are then using a known solution. If the meter reads
> correctly then your water PH is 6.85.

Thanks for the reply!

OK, I checked the 7.01 pH buffer solution with a colorimeter - the only
pH gadget I can rely upon. It gives 7.0 pH. I noticed that the pH probe,
which initially read 6.85 pH in the tank, drifted over 30 minutes to a
stable 7.05 pH. The colorimeter also concurs with a reading of 7.1 pH.
Everything is now in agreement. But a pH of 7.05 translates to 37 ppm of
CO2 with my water. Woops!

I reckon the buffer solutions pulled the probe's readings down
temporarily. Is this known to happen??


Nikki

Rick
January 23rd 05, 07:30 PM
>
> Thanks for the reply!
>
> OK, I checked the 7.01 pH buffer solution with a colorimeter - the only
> pH gadget I can rely upon. It gives 7.0 pH. I noticed that the pH probe,
> which initially read 6.85 pH in the tank, drifted over 30 minutes to a
> stable 7.05 pH. The colorimeter also concurs with a reading of 7.1 pH.
> Everything is now in agreement. But a pH of 7.05 translates to 37 ppm of
> CO2 with my water. Woops!
>
> I reckon the buffer solutions pulled the probe's readings down
> temporarily. Is this known to happen??
>
>
> Nikki
>

I wouldn't be concerned with a 37 ppm of CO2. I keep mine around 30 all the
time. Great for the plants.

Rick