Quote:
Originally Posted by EnderG60
"no copper has ever or will ever be anywhere near this tank."
"Copper tubing remains the most widely used home plumbing material among homebuilders and homeowners. Professional installation or some plumbing knowledge is usually needed, as the use of soldering compounds or compression fittings is necessary to join the various sections of pipe.
In situations where the pH of the water is below 6.5, there is the potential for copper to leach from the pipe into drinking water above allowable levels."
There is a very good chance your home has copper piping for drinking water, most do. The potential for a very slow but deadly build up of copper in a reef tank is very real from copper leaching. What is considered the EPA allowable safe drinking level is 1.3 PPM (parts per million), but for a reef tank it is measured in PPB (parts per billion), a thousand times less.
Often the electrical system in a home is often grounded to copper piping. Stray currents or shorts can easily cause galvanic action and leach copper ions into your water. Also copper buried in the ground can see stray ground currents that cause the copper pipes to corrode. A corroding copper pipe is leaching copper into your drinking water and the water you may well be using for the reef tank.
In one area in Florida that I am familiar with the homes, they have so much natural stray ground current, that their waste water even exceeds the allowable EPA limit for copper in the waste going to waste treatment plant. It is due to the copper leaching inside the homes buried copper water system. A sure killer for a reef tank.
Something worth considering as an issue and maybe your problem.
I filter all my RO water through copper removal media because of this concern.
I am going to post this as a new topic. I think it is important information to realize and consider if you are in the hobby.
Originally Posted by EnderG60
"no copper has ever or will ever be anywhere near this tank."
"Copper tubing remains the most widely used home plumbing material among homebuilders and homeowners. Professional installation or some plumbing knowledge is usually needed, as the use of soldering compounds or compression fittings is necessary to join the various sections of pipe.
In situations where the pH of the water is below 6.5, there is the potential for copper to leach from the pipe into drinking water above allowable levels."
There is a very good chance your home has copper piping for drinking water, most do. The potential for a very slow but deadly build up of copper in a reef tank is very real from copper leaching. What is considered the EPA allowable safe drinking level is 1.3 PPM (parts per million), but for a reef tank it is measured in PPB (parts per billion), a thousand times less.
Often the electrical system in a home is often grounded to copper piping. Stray currents or shorts can easily cause galvanic action and leach copper ions into your water. Also copper buried in the ground can see stray ground currents that cause the copper pipes to corrode. A corroding copper pipe is leaching copper into your drinking water and the water you may well be using for the reef tank.
In one area in Florida that I am familiar with the homes, they have so much natural stray ground current, that their waste water even exceeds the allowable EPA limit for copper in the waste going to waste treatment plant. It is due to the copper leaching inside the homes buried copper water system. A sure killer for a reef tank.
Something worth considering as an issue and maybe your problem.
I filter all my RO water through copper removal media because of this concern.
I am going to post this as a new topic. I think it is important information to realize and consider if you are in the hobby.