farfromsea
Active member
Hi all I'm using the Hanna Marine Master. I *did* use RODI to zero the calcium--did not rinse with tap water--and the calcium in my tank is astronomically high. Did a 20-25% water change looks like I need to dose with washing soda. But to what level should I raise the alkalinity? Or just dose and test after five days?
Per Randy's post I need to dose with soda ash due to the pH being below 8.2. Online seems to indicate that putting sodium bicarbonate aka baking soda in the oven at 300F will produce soda ash aka sodium carbonate. Will this ruin a nonstick pan?
I need to dose to get back into the good zone (red box) and I'm presuming the calcium will bind to the soda ash and not show on water tests? I've never dosed the tank ever so the high calcium isn't because of that...
I'm guessing I should add enough to raise my ~10 gallons of water by 1 meq/L and then test and see? Wait 24H and do a second dose if my ratio isn't any better?
Test | Before WC | After WC |
pH | 7.9 | 7.8 |
Alk (dKH) | 8.4 | 9.2 |
Alk (meq/L) | 3 | 3.286 |
Calcium | 600 | 600 |
Mag | 1255 | 1460 |
Nitrates ppm | 25 | 27.8 |
Phosphate ppm | 0.1 | 0.16 |
Per Randy's post I need to dose with soda ash due to the pH being below 8.2. Online seems to indicate that putting sodium bicarbonate aka baking soda in the oven at 300F will produce soda ash aka sodium carbonate. Will this ruin a nonstick pan?
I need to dose to get back into the good zone (red box) and I'm presuming the calcium will bind to the soda ash and not show on water tests? I've never dosed the tank ever so the high calcium isn't because of that...
I'm guessing I should add enough to raise my ~10 gallons of water by 1 meq/L and then test and see? Wait 24H and do a second dose if my ratio isn't any better?