Just to throw a little monkey wrench into our expected outcomes...
I had a problem with a reputable brand of salt which sent my tanks into a tailspin from hell. Tried to correct with water changes, got worse, finally made up new water, circulated and heated for a day and then tested it at 1.025 (per plastic cheapo meter)... Got 620 ppm for the Ca and dKh 6, ph 8. Emailed the company, they said my test kits are bad. Got 3 more brands to test alk and they all said the same low result. For the Ca bought a Hagen kit, got 760 Ca. Found a different batch of Hagen Ca and tried that, got 740 ppm. Gee, should have stuck with the results from TropicMarin's kit! "Only" 620 which the salt manufacturer agreed was way too high! I didn't email the salt manufacturer again as since found others have had the same result from this brand-random bad buckets. When they claimed to have found them on lists such as this everyone poo poohed it, impossible, the manufacturer has a stellar reputation! So am not going to name them here. Besides, that batch is sold and gone, and any manufacturer could be next.
Anyways, my ph crashed but since I am a test nazi I caught it before too much damage was done. A friend using the same batch of salt was not so lucky, he lost every living thing in his tank. All he noticed was low ph as he uses 5 in 1 test strips and nothing else, and doesn't know how to even really read that test.
Previously I had taken a whole bunch of brands of aquarium test kits and run them side by side. Found some were really entirely useless right off the shelf, others fairly consistent but all slightly different. The tests I am now using are by salifert for alk, Aquarium Pharmaceuticals for nitrate and all others by Hagen. Some of the other brands really stunk... amazing. One you couldn't even get any liquid out, the precipitate had solidified completely at the top of the bottle, not sure how that happened... It was brand new off the shelf from a major box store. Have stuck with the brands that are cheap and likely to be used by my friends and customers. Don't think customers are going to be happy if I try and sell them the really expensive kits so want to find the best of the cheapos. As I work in the industry, don't think I should mention names of the real stinkers. We still sell salt by the company that sent the bad batch, gee it was really cheap that time too, think they knew. We don't sell the test kits by the company that failed my kitchen table comparison though, and the salt manufacturer has been good since, not that I will use them again.
Moral of the story, even the best and most reputable manufacturers are putting out unreliable batches now and then, and the test kits are not all that accurate either.
Also was using a reputable brand of 2 part additive and both bottles had significant precipitate in the bottom. I have no idea how much of the chemistry made it out of that bottle and in what proportions, which sucks.
Think I will keep doing my little chemistry experiments...
I have part of an art degree and that is my higher education. Should have stuck with my original interest-non mammal vet med. Art school was pretty light on the whole chemistry aspect of our education. All I know is what you guys teach me so thanks for doing so!
Kate