kylem said:
I siphoned the bottom of the tank when I found the NH4 came up. For the Most part I haven't had any NH4 since the first breakin period.
I have quite a bio load tho and I have cut back on my feeding. I added the culurpa to my refugium tank again to help reduce the wastes.
This should help. I would imagine that the NH4 is coming from an incomplete cycle. If you recently added some new fish or somesuch, this could be the case. I wouldn't expect NH4 to come from the pH additive itself. The change in pH may have altered the ratio of NH3 to NH4 but I wouldn't expect this really to be very drastic.
My alk is now 150 ppm and my PH is 8.0
I don't know what my Ca is right now because my test kit run out and I order one but its not hear yet.
People normally quote AlK in units of meq/L or dKH. I'm not sure if 150ppm is low or high. Can you please quote numbers in the other units?
My larger hermit crabs have finally resumed there normal activities and just molted again.
What do you mean by precipating CaCO3..do you mean residue of Ca build up?
I find it strange that when you raise Alk, Ca goes down and that when you raise Ca, Alk goes down. I'm not sure what to make of this. If Ca and Alk get very out of balance or either get too high then it is possible for the calcium carbonate concentration to reach a point where it is insoluble in the water. At this point it will begin to drop out of solution and you might see scaly build up on the glass or heater etc, or you might notice small white flakes floating around in your system.
It sounds to me like your system is out of balance. I would suggest for you to use Kalk to adjust Ca and Alk. Because this is a balanced additive, it is much harder to get Ca and Alk out of balance.
If you really can't get your system under control, I would suggest doing a couple of large water changes back to back (maybe even 3) to help balance the natural levels of these using the salt. From that point use Kalk instead of a 2 part. The only real reason a person would need a 2 part Ca/Alk additive is if the calcium demand of the system was so high that Kalk itself couldn't keep up with the demand. At that point a stronger supplementation strategy would be necessary and a 2-part might be warrented. Also, if you pH is chronically low, this could be due to CO2 buildup inside your house if you have been running a gas furnace and your house if very tight and insulated. If you have a skimmer, these problems can be more exagerated.
Also, if you system is only 6 months old and your Ca test is already gone, you are really doing a lot of testing. I only suggest to test 1/week. A 25 test kit should then last you 8 months or longer. If you are trying to keep your tank balanced very frequently this can lead to problems. Ca and Alk are not really very critical to health. You should target the 380-420 range and don't adjust until you are at the bottom of the range.
By the way I really learned alot from the Chemisty thread on Phosphates!
Thanks...Collin