Cal/Alk Balance

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Holygral

Holygral
Joined
Jul 15, 2006
Messages
697
Location
Ohio/US
I can't seem to get my calcium and Alk to balance out where they should be.

PH is between 8.1-8.2
Cal is 475
Alk is 250 ppm


My Alk is always high, 55 gal tank, 10 % weekly water changes. RODI water. Instant Ocean salt, nitrites, nitrates and Phos are all 0. Salinity is 1.27 with Refractometer. Looking for help as always :)
 
What is your suppliment scheme ? How are you adding Ca++ and Alk to get them that high ? Who's kits are you using and dont' say Red Sea :D
 
DEEP RED Sea........Kidding

The only supplyment I am usng is Seachem Reef Advanatage to get the calcium to balance with the high Alk. I am using Salifert for Calcium, also for Alk but it is off the parameters so using Aquarium Pharm for Alk to get a measurement
 
opps also

using Kent Tech-I ( Iodine) once a week, Kent Strontium once a week, Kent Coral-Vite once a week, Was using Purple -Up once a week, I have backed off of this while trying to get balance where it should be. Soak BTA food in Zoecon probally twice a week. THANKS
 
if you have an imbalance in one direction or another...simply adding the deficient ingredient, be it calcium or carbonate won't do the trick, no matter how much you add...the old "marbles in a bucket" analogy...let's say you have a bucket of marbles...white ones represent calcium and black ones carbonates...there is a balance between the two...and if the bucket is all the way full and there are too many black ones for example, you can't add white ones to make up for it...the bucket is full and they simply won't fit...

The best solution is to change out the imbalanced water and replace it with balanced salt water. It takes a bit of time, but if a severe imbalance exists, this is the best way to fix it.

here is a few good reads on it...

http://www.reefkeeping.com/issues/2002-04/rhf/feature/index.php

http://www.advancedaquarist.com/issues/nov2002/chem.htm

http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2006-06/rhf/index.php

be aware that Mg plays a role in it as well...have you checked your Mg levels?


MikeS
 
Stop adding this crap to your tank=> Purple -Up . I'll bet that is your problem. Many have had issues like you. It contains some powdered aragonite. It ends up collecting on the bottom. When the pH drops into the mid 7's on the bottom, like at night, in the pore spaces of the SB, it goes into solution and raises the Ca++ and Alk. It is something you can not control. Some have no issues with Purple Up but otherd so.

Also check those Alk kits out somewhere else, like a new batch of IO or at the LFS.

Mike

That "marbles in a bucket" does not work. I can add lots of white marbles with no effect on the black ones.
 
Mike

That "marbles in a bucket" does not work. I can add lots of white marbles with no effect on the black ones.


Yes...but if the bucket is full and out of balance to start with...you won't get the balance back right? for example if your Ca is much higher than your alk, adding carbontes will not raise the alkalinity because the imbalance will casue situations where it is not incorperated into the water chemistry properly or precipitates out...

from Randy...
Unfortunately, calcium and alkalinity are linked4,5 in many ways in reef tanks, and these links can lead to serious problems if they are not fully understood. If, for example, you add too much of a calcium supplement, you will drive down alkalinity as you get precipitation of calcium carbonate in the tank. Likewise, adding too much of an alkalinity supplement can result in reduction of calcium. Consequently, trying to correct one problem can cause another. Moreover, if you try to correct a calcium or alkalinity “problem” with the wrong type of additive, you might accomplish nothing more than creating limestone in your tank.

that was the point I was trying to make with the marbles in the bucket analogy... :)

MikeS
 
Mike

I have read the "marbles in bucket analogy" and so has Randy and we both say it has holes in it ;)


for example if your Ca is much higher than your alk, adding carbontes will not raise the alkalinity because the imbalance will casue situations where it is not incorperated into the water chemistry properly or precipitates out...

That is not so at all. Of course you can raise the Alk and without any precip. It is an issue of how high you raise the Alk to get precip. If your Ca++ is 450 and the Alk is 2.5 meq / l it is not an issue to raise it to 3 or 4 meq / l without precip. But if you brought it up to maybe 5, 6 or 7 meq / l , especially if the pH was high.....poof....CaCO3, snowstorm.

Lets call Ca++/Alk balance at 410 ppm Ca++, Alk 2.25 meq/ l, pretty much NSW in any seawater chem book with a pH of around 8.2. We call balance between Ca++ and Alk as for every 20 ppm Ca++ you need 1 meq / l. Meaning, if you are at 410 and what to rise the Ca++ to 430, you "should" raise the Alk from 2.25 to 3.25 to be in a Ca/Alk balance. What is often misunderstood and not explained is this balance, even though the answer is right there in front of you.

Lets pretend precip is taking place by coral, coralline, abiotic, etc. This is forming CaCO3. For every 20 ppm Ca++ that leaves solution to make CaCO3 you need 1 meq / l. Ok, think........seawater has 2.25 meq / l and needs 20 ppm Ca++/1 meq / l to make CaCO3, which yields 50 ppm CaCO3 as Aragonite or Calcite. So, 2.25 x 20 ppm = 45 ppm Ca++ and 410 -45 = 365 ppm Ca++. That means that if all the Alk left solution to read Zero Alk, to form CaCO3, there is still 365 ppm Ca++ in the water. Now where is the balance ? Balance here would mean if your run your reef tank at 365 ppm Ca++ the Alk should be zero to be balanced. Make any sense ? How does the bucket analogy fit in here ? But that is balance. Our balance scheme more or less is around NSW and we go from there, within reason. Most peopel do not have their Ca++/ Alk at balance. It does not have to be balanced, just within a traget zone.

...you won't get the balance back right?

IO salt usually is around 360 -380 Ca++ with an Alk of 4 meq/ l, so it is way out of balance :D To be balanced IO should have an Alk of 1 meq / l. And what does everybody do to bring it in balance ? Raise the Ca++ with Calcium Chloride to say 420-450.

Check Randy's and Craig's article on this Ca++ and this Alk thing. You will see where they state if the Ca++ is to high and you want to bring it down and back into balance add buffer to increase the Alk to bring down the Ca++. I don't like this idea and Randy or Craig are not hot on it either.


But yes Mike I understand what you mean :D Just don't be using the Marble bucket thing.

Balance for me is NOT just Ca++, Mg ++ and Alk but all those other ions that are out of balance, SO4, Na++, Cl- etc. How often have you seen someone post that their Alk is normal or their Ca++ is normal and they try to raise one and it goes right back to where it is. Pretend their Ca++ is 380 and the Alk is 2 meq/ l "Why can't I get my Alk up", Why can't I get my Ca++ up" are the ? With theses levels there should not be an issue of raising either but there is. This is a tank that is out of balance and only water changes will fix it. The tank has set is own new balance based on its chemistry, which is not the balance WE want. If you do regular water changes balanced or even having Ca++ and Alk out of balance is not an issue in raising either as long as you don't get carried away. Such is often not the case when there are no or few water changes. Some of this is brought about by the reefer himself by adding or changing sup's from x to y, sometimes because Bob said to do this, then Henry said to do this then Judy said to do this. As Randy said "Consequently, trying to correct one problem can cause another" and "these links can lead to serious problems if they are not fully understood."

I use to use a method that would tell me if the tank was leading to an imbalance visually. I would take a small amount of SeaChem Labs Marine Buffer and add it to warm water in a glass, let it dissolve and then dump it in the tank. An imbalance can be seen visually by what happens when it hits the tank water. A cloud will form and if that cloud is gone in a few seconds the tank is balanced. The longer it takes for the cloud to dissipate the more imbalanced the tank was. A bad tank may take 1 to 2 hrs to clear or white transluscent blobs would form and float around.
 
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Now with all that information that everyone contributed to I so very clear on what to do now.............yea right :). From all of that I think what I can extract from it is to do water changes and the parameters would straighten out? Is this correct and if so how much water changes? I currently do about 10% a week.
 
I think you're mostly correct in your estimates of what they are telling you.

Do water changes, to help bring your levels down to normal. Personally, I would do 25% changes weekly.

I believe they are also trying to tell you to STOP any other additives, until your levels are back to normal. Its most likely one (or a combination of) of those additives, that has helped get everything out of ballance, so stopping those for now is your best choice.
 
Ed you hit the nail on the head:D A 25-30 % / wk WC will produce a flat line. Meaning, no accumulation of unwanted ions.
 
Boomer.... you said....

IO salt usually is around 360 -380 Ca++ with an Alk of 4 meq/ l, so it is way out of balance To be balanced IO should have an Alk of 1 meq / l. And what does everybody do to bring it in balance ? Raise the Ca++ with Calcium Chloride to say 420-450.

And based on what Ive read on your post above, the best way is to do water change weekly to balance things out...

What should I do with the IO salt that is not balance? Are you saying (if I understand it right) is to raise the CA to 420-450 to make it balance with 4 meg/l alkalinity.

Sorry for stupid question...Just want to make sure I understand it right....

Bottom line....

Its better to balance the IO fresh mix then do water change.... instead of correcting whats already in the main tank.... ????

Thank you
 
Thats exactly what I do. It keeps the tank balanced and stable rather than having to dose just ca to the tank. I also add mg to the fresh mix.

Don
 
Yes Katch sup the mix before you use it. You do not need to raise the Ca++ to 425-450, 400-425 is good enogh. Adding it to the tank and then sup'ing it is just stupid IMHO.
 
Got it... Thanks....

If any case that IO is lower than 400-425, in which this is my case... I will simply beef up the fresh mix to 400-425 settings.... then water change....

It make sense.....

Thanks a lot...
 
Got it... Thanks....

If any case that IO is lower than 400-425, in which this is my case... I will simply beef up the fresh mix to 400-425 settings.... then water change....

It make sense.....

Thanks a lot...

That's what I do...I adjust the salt mix to 1.026...then I test Mg, Ca, Alk....and adjust them up to NSW values prior to adding it to the tank....I've been doing that for a few years, it has always worked well for me...I drip kalk and then check Ca and alk every 2 weeks or so...and use calcium cholride and baking soda to put them back to NSW values...I check Mg monthy and adjust accordingly...this has worked well for me...even in the BB tank, I don't see imbalance problems....

MikeS
 
Calcium Chloride for Calcium.... and where to get this again? (alternative source)

Baking Soda for what again? Any special things to do to it before adding to tank?

Or I can just do additives to add a little here and there...?
 

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