I have had a marine aquarium for a little while now. Lost all my fish about 6 months ago due to an unnoticed dead fish (i went away for business for a week and came back to a dead aquarium - even though I gave very specific instructions to the care takers <grrrrr>)
After my fish went away, I redid the entire aquarium, going to a fine coral substrate, and a new overhang filter, with a built in (albeit cheap) protein skimmer.
Anyhow I usually only tested PH, NH3, and CA. I'm not a very avid aquarists, and hence didn't really want to be bothered with having to spend $$$$ on tests equipment and all other things. Well I finally went out and bought a Hagen / Nutrafin master test kit. And decided to actually test everything just to see where my water stands, and in the end obviously help promote a much healthier environment for the fish, and possibly get into a reef aquarium later on.
All my readings were within range, except for KH and chelated irons.
My KH is very high. In the area of 200 mg/L
Chelated Irons are 0, zilch, none.
At first I though they were anomolies, so I tested again the next day, with identical results. Here are all my numbers.
PH = 8.4
CA = 430 ppm
NH3 = 0.2 mg/L
PO4 = 0.7 ppm
NO3 = 10 mg/L
NO2 = 0.2 mg/L
KH = 200 mg/L
FE (non-chelated) = 0
FE (chelated) = 0
I use Brita filtered water (i'm not spending the money on an RO/DI system), with tap conditioner just to make sure. The only additive I use is SeaChem Marine Buffer.
Should I be concerned with the high alkalinity and no presence of chelated irons?
After my fish went away, I redid the entire aquarium, going to a fine coral substrate, and a new overhang filter, with a built in (albeit cheap) protein skimmer.
Anyhow I usually only tested PH, NH3, and CA. I'm not a very avid aquarists, and hence didn't really want to be bothered with having to spend $$$$ on tests equipment and all other things. Well I finally went out and bought a Hagen / Nutrafin master test kit. And decided to actually test everything just to see where my water stands, and in the end obviously help promote a much healthier environment for the fish, and possibly get into a reef aquarium later on.
All my readings were within range, except for KH and chelated irons.
My KH is very high. In the area of 200 mg/L
Chelated Irons are 0, zilch, none.
At first I though they were anomolies, so I tested again the next day, with identical results. Here are all my numbers.
PH = 8.4
CA = 430 ppm
NH3 = 0.2 mg/L
PO4 = 0.7 ppm
NO3 = 10 mg/L
NO2 = 0.2 mg/L
KH = 200 mg/L
FE (non-chelated) = 0
FE (chelated) = 0
I use Brita filtered water (i'm not spending the money on an RO/DI system), with tap conditioner just to make sure. The only additive I use is SeaChem Marine Buffer.
Should I be concerned with the high alkalinity and no presence of chelated irons?