darrowj
Non-member
Water Chemistry: Scientific Method vs. Rumors and Hearsay
One of the most frustrating things about this hobby is how much I do not still know after spending thousands of dollars and a couple of years taking part in it. Is there a resource where I can read and clearly understand the cause and effects of varying aspects of water chemistry? I’m thinking of something written for a non marine biologist.
I ask after having a long conversation with a person at a LFS. It started with me picking up a bottle of liquid calcium because I tested and found calcium was low in my tank. I was also looking for some phosphate pads. Nutshell version is that I did not buy the product or anything else from the store.
Below are some points I remember from the conversation (paraphrasing):
1. "Don't add liquid calcium as it will inversly your magnesium levels. Think of calcium and magnesium as being on opposite ends of a seesaw."
2. "Don't buy phosphate pad or other related products. They remove phosphates too slowly and are not worth the money. The pads will only work well with low PH level like 7.0 and that is too low for a marine tank to handle."
3. "Testing PH is a *almost* a waste of time without knowing your alkalinity. The reason being is that your PH can swing wildly over the course of the day."
4. "If your calcified algae starts to shrink you are in big trouble and you need to react right away as your tank is going to crash soon."
5. "The best way to remove nitrates, remove phosphates, add calcium, add magnesium and get your alk/PH to proper levels is routine water changes. Adding or removing individual things impacts other things and can make your water chemistry much worse."
Some of the above I knew and others did not. Some might be right and others wrong. The point is that the person explained things in common language that were easy to understand. I really wish there was a single resource I could read to explain these things using concrete numbers for levels and easily understood relationships.
To date I have not found such a resource. Books seem to have bits and pieces. Some people I talk to are very experienced but others aren't and rely on rumors and hearsay. Everyone gives advise though and we need to use trial and error to determine who is right and wrong. It can get expensive in an already expensive hobby.
One of the most frustrating things about this hobby is how much I do not still know after spending thousands of dollars and a couple of years taking part in it. Is there a resource where I can read and clearly understand the cause and effects of varying aspects of water chemistry? I’m thinking of something written for a non marine biologist.
I ask after having a long conversation with a person at a LFS. It started with me picking up a bottle of liquid calcium because I tested and found calcium was low in my tank. I was also looking for some phosphate pads. Nutshell version is that I did not buy the product or anything else from the store.
Below are some points I remember from the conversation (paraphrasing):
1. "Don't add liquid calcium as it will inversly your magnesium levels. Think of calcium and magnesium as being on opposite ends of a seesaw."
2. "Don't buy phosphate pad or other related products. They remove phosphates too slowly and are not worth the money. The pads will only work well with low PH level like 7.0 and that is too low for a marine tank to handle."
3. "Testing PH is a *almost* a waste of time without knowing your alkalinity. The reason being is that your PH can swing wildly over the course of the day."
4. "If your calcified algae starts to shrink you are in big trouble and you need to react right away as your tank is going to crash soon."
5. "The best way to remove nitrates, remove phosphates, add calcium, add magnesium and get your alk/PH to proper levels is routine water changes. Adding or removing individual things impacts other things and can make your water chemistry much worse."
Some of the above I knew and others did not. Some might be right and others wrong. The point is that the person explained things in common language that were easy to understand. I really wish there was a single resource I could read to explain these things using concrete numbers for levels and easily understood relationships.
To date I have not found such a resource. Books seem to have bits and pieces. Some people I talk to are very experienced but others aren't and rely on rumors and hearsay. Everyone gives advise though and we need to use trial and error to determine who is right and wrong. It can get expensive in an already expensive hobby.
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