Dolomiteclay
New member
Sorry about the long post in advance. As the subject would suggest, I'm observing some low pH values in my tank and although it doesn't appear to have any negative impact on the inhabitants (LPS, SPS, Clams, anemones, etc.) nothing I do really works.
I'll start with my parameters.
65 gallon predominately lps with a 20 gallon sump
pH-7.6-7.8
Alk-9-11
Ca-380-420
NO3-2.5
Mg-1300
Dose 12ML every 8 hours of Bionic CA and Alk.
My pH measurements generally come from a probe that is hooked to my archon and I have updated the archon as well as and calibrated the probe several times. I have also confirmed these values with multiple test kits.
Last month my old skimmer had to be replaced and I got a new one. I moved down in a size to a BM 5 that has a smaller pump than the old one. Since I live in a new apartment I run a CO2 scrubber hooked up to the air intake of my skimmer in order to keep my pH around 8. After a few days of running the new skimmer I noticed that my pH was hovering around 7.8 and that the media in the reactor was not expiring (changing color) as quickly. Seeing as how it is a smaller skimmer with a smaller pump, I just assumed that it was taking in less air than the other and decided I would add air stone to my sump in order drive off some of the excessive CO2 in the water. That has helped some, but my pH still maxes out at 7.8 and drops to 7.6 at night.
The good thing is that this issue is not harming my livestock. However, I just can't believe that I still have that much CO2 in the tank. I have even had the windows open recently due to the warm weather in Texas. Any ideas on what could be causing the excessive CO2 levels and subsequent low pH values would be appreciated.
I'll start with my parameters.
65 gallon predominately lps with a 20 gallon sump
pH-7.6-7.8
Alk-9-11
Ca-380-420
NO3-2.5
Mg-1300
Dose 12ML every 8 hours of Bionic CA and Alk.
My pH measurements generally come from a probe that is hooked to my archon and I have updated the archon as well as and calibrated the probe several times. I have also confirmed these values with multiple test kits.
Last month my old skimmer had to be replaced and I got a new one. I moved down in a size to a BM 5 that has a smaller pump than the old one. Since I live in a new apartment I run a CO2 scrubber hooked up to the air intake of my skimmer in order to keep my pH around 8. After a few days of running the new skimmer I noticed that my pH was hovering around 7.8 and that the media in the reactor was not expiring (changing color) as quickly. Seeing as how it is a smaller skimmer with a smaller pump, I just assumed that it was taking in less air than the other and decided I would add air stone to my sump in order drive off some of the excessive CO2 in the water. That has helped some, but my pH still maxes out at 7.8 and drops to 7.6 at night.
The good thing is that this issue is not harming my livestock. However, I just can't believe that I still have that much CO2 in the tank. I have even had the windows open recently due to the warm weather in Texas. Any ideas on what could be causing the excessive CO2 levels and subsequent low pH values would be appreciated.