jdieck
New member
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10312805#post10312805 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by yossarian
Thanks -
I wasn't going to use the Kalk stirrer/doser for Kalk, but instead to mix and dose other chemicals. such as Kent's Liquid Reactor or A+B two-step -- in place of a CaRx.
Sounds like, just like a CaRx, you are stuck manually figuring out the proper dosage.
By the way, Kent's Liquid Reactor has been pretty good to me so far and appears to have the perfect mix of Calcium / Alk.
A+B two step is a balanced additive but they can not be mixed together previous to the addition, If you do so the products in the independent bottles will react to each other to form insoluble calcium carbonate which which is not in a usable form to add calcium and alkalinity to your system so the two parts have to be added independently.
Regarding Liquid reactor besed on their specifications it is similar to Purple up in which it contains very finelly ground aragonite sand (Calcium Carbonate). In my opinion, because calcium carbonate does not dissolve into it's constituent elements at the normal PH we keep in our aquariums (8 to 8.4) it is just like adding new sand to your system but again IMO it does not provide the usable calcium and alkalinity bffering required.
Eventually may dissolve some if it reaches parts in your system that have a low PH (like the anoxic areas of a deep sand bed) but the same effect is obtained by the dissolution of the sand itself. In other words I do not think Liquid reactor or Purple up are suitable additives for calcium and alkalinity although they may contain other trace elements that may or may not be beneficial to your system.
Furthermore, when those fine particles suspended in the water column are taken with a test sample using the tritration method like we use for calcium and alkalinity, those particles are dissolved by the addition of the acid tritrant thus giving a false reading which will be higher than the actual level of Calcium or carbonate ions in the water and giving you the impresion that they actually add calcium and/or alkalinity.
Here is an article that review this in more detail:
http://www.advancedaquarist.com/issues/july2002/chem.htm