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CO2 Controller and Buffers
I just switched from a timer-based CO2 system to a CO2 controller. I was
getting a wide fluctuation in pH from 7.6 in the AM before the timer started to 7.0 at the end of the lights-on cycle. Now I'm in the range of 6.9-7.1. I use RO water and just switched from Kent's RO Right to Seachem's Equilibrium. I also use Kent's pH Stable. I'd like to keep the tank at about 6.8. I see that there are buffers available that claim to stabilize the tank there, but I've not had any experience with them. I do about a 40% weekly water change and bubble the CO2 at a bubble a second. Is the combination of Equilibrium + pH Stable the correct way to go? |
CO2 Controller and Buffers
MJB wrote:
I just switched from a timer-based CO2 system to a CO2 controller. I was getting a wide fluctuation in pH from 7.6 in the AM before the timer started to 7.0 at the end of the lights-on cycle. Now I'm in the range of 6.9-7.1. I use RO water and just switched from Kent's RO Right to Seachem's Equilibrium. I also use Kent's pH Stable. I'd like to keep the tank at about 6.8. I see that there are buffers available that claim to stabilize the tank there, but I've not had any experience with them. I do about a 40% weekly water change and bubble the CO2 at a bubble a second. Is the combination of Equilibrium + pH Stable the correct way to go? What is your tap water like? It seems like a lot of work rebuilding RO unless there is something horribly wrong with your tap... I'm not well versed in the ways of RO but I have read many times around here about various PH buffers having phosphates (I personally don't know if pH Stable is one of them???) and making ph/co2 relationships inaccurate. Hopefully some more knowledgeable than myself will chime in and help. Ron |
CO2 Controller and Buffers
I originally went to RO because my tap water has a pH of about 7.6. I made
the switch before I put in the CO2. Never considered going back to tap water. pH stable claims to not contain phosphates. I do have a history of higher-than-one-would-expect phosphates. I'll have to do some tests on my reconstituted RO water and see if that could be the source. "Ron Nelson" wrote in message ... What is your tap water like? It seems like a lot of work rebuilding RO unless there is something horribly wrong with your tap... I'm not well versed in the ways of RO but I have read many times around here about various PH buffers having phosphates (I personally don't know if pH Stable is one of them???) and making ph/co2 relationships inaccurate. Hopefully some more knowledgeable than myself will chime in and help. Ron |
CO2 Controller and Buffers
MJB wrote:
I originally went to RO because my tap water has a pH of about 7.6. I made the switch before I put in the CO2. Never considered going back to tap water. pH stable claims to not contain phosphates. I do have a history of higher-than-one-would-expect phosphates. I'll have to do some tests on my reconstituted RO water and see if that could be the source. With the addition of CO2 if your tap PH is 7.6 and your KH is around 3 (guessing) and you set the PH controller around 6.6 to 6.8 you would have 15-25 ppm of CO2 which is what some of the pro's around here have recommended for planted tanks in the past. If you want to see a good table for the PH/KH/CO2 relationship have a look at http://www.thekrib.com/Plants/CO2/kh-ph-co2-chart.html Hope this helps, Ron |
CO2 Controller and Buffers
MJB wrote:
I just switched from a timer-based CO2 system to a CO2 controller. I was getting a wide fluctuation in pH from 7.6 in the AM before the timer started to 7.0 at the end of the lights-on cycle. Now I'm in the range of 6.9-7.1. My tapwater is nearly identical to yours. I leave the CO2 on 24 hours. The pH varies less than 0.2 from end of light to end of dark periods. I use RO water and just switched from Kent's RO Right to Seachem's Equilibrium. I also use Kent's pH Stable. I also use RO, but am happy with RO Right. pH Stable is 100% baking soda (Sodium bicarbonate). Most of using RO buffer with Sodium bicarbonate, but use the cheaper Arm & Hammer brand from the supermarket! True confessions: I did buy one jar of pH Stable before confirming it was baking soda. I'd like to keep the tank at about 6.8. I see that there are buffers available that claim to stabilize the tank there, but I've not had any experience with them. Do yourself a favor and keep it that way. Set your KH with baking soda, measuring carefully for the first few weeks to figure out the right amount to add with a given weekly water change. Then target 20-25ppm CO2, and set the pH controller to achieve that. Or return the pH controller and set your bubble rate to do the same thing, 24hrs per day. Works for me. In any case, targeting pH is not the right way to think about it in a plant tank. You want to set your KH, then target a CO2 concentration, which is in turn measured by your pH. I set my KH at 3, which requires 1 teaspoon of baking soda in a 30 gallon weekly water change. Then I adjust the needle valve to get 25 ppm CO2, which I calculate by measuring pH at 6.6 and reading the chart at http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/aqua/art_plant_co2chart.htm |
CO2 Controller and Buffers
Why does it important to keep PH levels at about 6.8 ?
"Dave Millman" wrote in message ... MJB wrote: I just switched from a timer-based CO2 system to a CO2 controller. I was getting a wide fluctuation in pH from 7.6 in the AM before the timer started to 7.0 at the end of the lights-on cycle. Now I'm in the range of 6.9-7.1. My tapwater is nearly identical to yours. I leave the CO2 on 24 hours. The pH varies less than 0.2 from end of light to end of dark periods. I use RO water and just switched from Kent's RO Right to Seachem's Equilibrium. I also use Kent's pH Stable. I also use RO, but am happy with RO Right. pH Stable is 100% baking soda (Sodium bicarbonate). Most of using RO buffer with Sodium bicarbonate, but use the cheaper Arm & Hammer brand from the supermarket! True confessions: I did buy one jar of pH Stable before confirming it was baking soda. I'd like to keep the tank at about 6.8. I see that there are buffers available that claim to stabilize the tank there, but I've not had any experience with them. Do yourself a favor and keep it that way. Set your KH with baking soda, measuring carefully for the first few weeks to figure out the right amount to add with a given weekly water change. Then target 20-25ppm CO2, and set the pH controller to achieve that. Or return the pH controller and set your bubble rate to do the same thing, 24hrs per day. Works for me. In any case, targeting pH is not the right way to think about it in a plant tank. You want to set your KH, then target a CO2 concentration, which is in turn measured by your pH. I set my KH at 3, which requires 1 teaspoon of baking soda in a 30 gallon weekly water change. Then I adjust the needle valve to get 25 ppm CO2, which I calculate by measuring pH at 6.6 and reading the chart at http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/aqua/art_plant_co2chart.htm |
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