teds
Member
Hi,
I'm not sure my question is exactly an "advanced topic", but hopefully an okay place to post. Our setup is a 160g tank (60"x24"x28") + ~75g sump. After months and months of doing the two part dosing thing, we bought a Korallin 1502 to replace the dosing. However it seems after a couple months of it being in place we are still unable to get the dKH consistently much higher than 7.7 or 8.0 (calcium about 390-400). Maybe I should just be satisfied with those values? Currently the C02 is running about 45 BPM and effluent about 60 DPM. I measure the dKH of the effluent at 43 (using a low range Salifert, 1.35ml reagent to color change). Note that I have messed with the thing raising both parameters in sync, but still no appreciable rise, if any, in dKH. So I'm trying to figure out what I'm missing or, more likely, doing wrong. Below are a couple of pics of our aquarium(still a work in progress ). I'm probably asking the impossible without any sort of point of reference, but I'm wondering if it is possible to tell from the pics if the amount of coral is possibly too demanding for the 1502? I wouldn't think so, but not sure what to think at this point.
Thank you for any thoughts or ideas,
Ted S.
I'm not sure my question is exactly an "advanced topic", but hopefully an okay place to post. Our setup is a 160g tank (60"x24"x28") + ~75g sump. After months and months of doing the two part dosing thing, we bought a Korallin 1502 to replace the dosing. However it seems after a couple months of it being in place we are still unable to get the dKH consistently much higher than 7.7 or 8.0 (calcium about 390-400). Maybe I should just be satisfied with those values? Currently the C02 is running about 45 BPM and effluent about 60 DPM. I measure the dKH of the effluent at 43 (using a low range Salifert, 1.35ml reagent to color change). Note that I have messed with the thing raising both parameters in sync, but still no appreciable rise, if any, in dKH. So I'm trying to figure out what I'm missing or, more likely, doing wrong. Below are a couple of pics of our aquarium(still a work in progress ). I'm probably asking the impossible without any sort of point of reference, but I'm wondering if it is possible to tell from the pics if the amount of coral is possibly too demanding for the 1502? I wouldn't think so, but not sure what to think at this point.
Thank you for any thoughts or ideas,
Ted S.