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When I take the reading for GH using my hot water ( have a water
softener installed) the GH is 6. Using the cold water the GH is 1. After leaving the hot water to cool the GH is 6. Can anyone explain this? Secondly, for the fish I have keyholes, yellow lab. gold ram, minor tetras, rasporas and corys, should I be using hot water cooled down when I do the water changes? TIA, Larry |
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In article , Larry
wrote: When I take the reading for GH using my hot water ( have a water softener installed) the GH is 6. Using the cold water the GH is 1. After leaving the hot water to cool the GH is 6. Can anyone explain this? There's probably a lot of scale in your hot water system, which partially dissolves to raise the hardness. I bet you carbonate hardness is up as well. How long has the water softener been in-line, and what sort is it? If it's an exchanger type, it's quite possibly exhausted and needs regenerating or replacing. Secondly, for the fish I have keyholes, yellow lab. gold ram, minor tetras, rasporas and corys, should I be using hot water cooled down when I do the water changes? My understanding is that the water you put in should be close to the temperature of the water you're taking out, especially if it's a large water change. |
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On Sun, 06 Feb 2005 15:48:54 -0500, "David C. Stone"
wrote: In article , Larry wrote: When I take the reading for GH using my hot water ( have a water softener installed) the GH is 6. Using the cold water the GH is 1. After leaving the hot water to cool the GH is 6. Can anyone explain this? There's probably a lot of scale in your hot water system, which partially dissolves to raise the hardness. I bet you carbonate hardness is up as well. How long has the water softener been in-line, and what sort is it? If it's an exchanger type, it's quite possibly exhausted and needs regenerating or replacing. It's the type with the long cylinder (think it contains resin of some sort) with the salt container off to the side. Secondly, for the fish I have keyholes, yellow lab. gold ram, minor tetras, rasporas and corys, should I be using hot water cooled down when I do the water changes? My understanding is that the water you put in should be close to the temperature of the water you're taking out, especially if it's a large water change. I wasn't very clear on the second question. With regards to the GH, if I used hot water cooled down my GH will be closer to 6. If mix the hot and cold my GH wlll be clsoer to 1. (like I usually do) All the best, Larry |
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Larry wrote:
On Sun, 06 Feb 2005 15:48:54 -0500, "David C. Stone" wrote: In article , Larry wrote: When I take the reading for GH using my hot water ( have a water softener installed) the GH is 6. Using the cold water the GH is 1. After leaving the hot water to cool the GH is 6. Can anyone explain this? There's probably a lot of scale in your hot water system, which partially dissolves to raise the hardness. I bet you carbonate hardness is up as well. How long has the water softener been in-line, and what sort is it? If it's an exchanger type, it's quite possibly exhausted and needs regenerating or replacing. It's the type with the long cylinder (think it contains resin of some sort) with the salt container off to the side. Secondly, for the fish I have keyholes, yellow lab. gold ram, minor tetras, rasporas and corys, should I be using hot water cooled down when I do the water changes? My understanding is that the water you put in should be close to the temperature of the water you're taking out, especially if it's a large water change. I wasn't very clear on the second question. With regards to the GH, if I used hot water cooled down my GH will be closer to 6. If mix the hot and cold my GH wlll be clsoer to 1. (like I usually do) All the best, Larry If your fish are healthy and the tank pH is stable, keep mixing hot and cold like you've been doing. All the fish you've listed except the yellow lab prefer soft water. -- __ Elaine T __ __' http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ |
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"Charles" wrote in message
... On Sun, 06 Feb 2005 13:12:21 -0500, Larry wrote: When I take the reading for GH using my hot water ( have a water softener installed) the GH is 6. Using the cold water the GH is 1. After leaving the hot water to cool the GH is 6. Can anyone explain this? Secondly, for the fish I have keyholes, yellow lab. gold ram, minor tetras, rasporas and corys, should I be using hot water cooled down when I do the water changes? TIA, Larry Something does not make sense here. If I understand correctly, your gH 1 water is very soft. why even have a water softener in the house at all. Especially one that is making the water harder. Can you check with your water company to find out what they think is in the water. It may be that your test kit is giving you funny readings. -- Charles Does not play well with others. I think his source water is over 6dgH and then it goes through a whole house ion exchange-type water softener using resin and brine rinse. Ordinarily the water should be 0-1 dgH after this but the output of Larry's hot water tank is 6dgH. It sounds like the hot water tank ran without a water softener for a long time and accumulated some scaling, which the now very soft water is leeching back into the water. Larry, if you want your water harder, install a faucet before the water softener. It will be cold water, so when doing water changes, add the water very slowly (you can also mix a small bit of very hot water to bring it up to temperature). By adjusting the ratio of unsoftened (raw) water to softened water, you can get a variety of different parameters. In the winter, when my well water is harder, I typically use 1 raw w/c (water change) for every 3 softened w/c. In the summer, I might alternate 1 for 1 or go straight raw (to reduce the salt levels in the tanks, from the softener). Note that I have fish which like hard water though. hth -- www.NetMax.tk |
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