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starmanres

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I made a newbie mistake and performed the KH test for attempting to measure Calcium. As my test showed lower every day, I continued to add Calcium to raise the test. When I finally realized what I was doing, my Alk was at 5 - my PH was 7.8 and my Calcium was over 800!

I have done a 25% water change over a week ago and now the Calcium is 640 (I know, still too high, but better). My ALK is 5.8 and my PH won't stay above 8.0 (It's 7.8 as I type...) I have a 120 Gallon tank with a 30 gallon sump and a 13 gallon refugium. I currently have 160 pounds of LR.

My ALK and PH are still low and I'm adding 3 1/2 teaspoons of both Seachem buffers (PH and ALK) every day... My Green Star Polyps are turning gray, my anemones are hiding under the LR, and I lost one of my clown fish yesterday...

Any suggestions would be appreciated!

Robert
 

ChrisRD

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My suggestion would be to stop chasing the numbers and just do a few more large water changes. Give things a chance to settle down and get back into balance.

FWIW, a pH of 7.8 is a bit low, but shouldn't be causing any problems with coral health.

How is the circulation in the tank? Do you have plenty of surface agitation? Are you using a protein skimmer? Do you have a sump?

All of these things can contribute to more stable pH levels.

BTW,
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starmanres

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I have a 30 gallon sump with a Eheim 1262 @ 900 GPH. I also have 2 JBJ Powerheads @ 60 GPH and two MaxiJet 1200's positioned around the tank. I have an AquaC EV-120 through my sump.

How large of a water change would you suggest?

I did a 5 gallon change today. I have enough to do a 25 gallon change tommorrow... Should I think about doing more than that?

Thanks for your suggestions and welcoming me!

Robert
 

hdtran

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Robert,

Ditto welcome to RDO.

When you report alkalinity, be sure to specify the units. There are two commonly used units, one is dkh (which is what I'm assuming you're using); the other is meq/l. Normal alkalinity in natural seawater is 2-3 meq/l, or around 5-8 dkh. Preferred alkalinity for aquaria is higher than nsw, or 3-4 meq (7-10 dkh). The conversion (not an exact factor, as meq & dkh are slightly different) is 1 meq/l ~~ 2.8 dkh.

You can change as much water as you like, as long as you match temperature and salinity (specific gravity). In a FO tank, I've changed 50-60% of the water in a single shot.

A 10-25% change should not cause any harm.
 

ChrisRD

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I agree that with parameters well matched, a 50% water change should be fine and will definitely put a major dent in getting your water chemistry back on track.

If all you can do is a 25 gallon water change, that's OK, but if you can do more, something like 40-50 gallons would be even better.

Keep us posted on your progress.
 

starmanres

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Ok...

I did a 30 gallon water change this afternoon. My PH is hovering around 7.91 so it has raised about .10 - which is good.

Should I be looking to do another 30 gallon change tomorrow or add some more buffers or just leave it alone... :lol:

I went seaching for my BTAs last night and got into a LR reconstruction project... How come if you move just two rocks they will NEVER go back to the same places?!? :!:

I put my BTAs in caves in the front of the tank where I can at least feed them now. One ate a big piece of shrimp, but the other one just lets it float away, but he's open and looks good.

I will post my testing results later. Thanks again for all the suggestions.

Robert
 

ChrisRD

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I wouldn't worry too much about the pH at this ponit. Once your water chemistry comes back into balance, pH values should be normal if you're getting enough water movement/aeration.

BTW, how are you testing pH and when? If it's a kit, have you tried any other kits? If it's a probe/monitor have you calibrated it recently?

Also, how do you top-off evaporation?
 

starmanres

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I have a pinpoint probe monitor for my PH. I calibrated it about three weeks ago and I occasionally test it with the drop method to ensure I'm in the ballpark.

I have my RODI system running through the wall into my sump hooked to a kent float valve. I really don't pay attention too much to it but the level remains constant.

So I should not make another water change on Friday? Just wait for it all to balance on it's own?

Again, Thanks!

Robert
 

ChrisRD

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IMO the levels you're at now shouldn't cause any problems, but personally, I would do another large water change to help things along.

It's possible that the negative reaction you've seen from some of your corals lately is just a response to rapidly changing water parameters.

Also, you might consider using kalkwasser for evaporation top-off. This will help boost your pH levels and adds both Ca/Alk in balanced quantities so things can't get out of whack.

I prefer using kalkwasser top-off combined with a Ca reactor or a good, balanced two-part additive (if kalkwasser alone isn't enough) like C-Balance or B-Ionic rather than trying to supplement the Ca/Alk separately. IMO it's too easy for things to get out of whack that way unless you're testing frequently to keep close track.

JMO & HTH
 

starmanres

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I made the second 30 gallon change today. The PH is hovering between 8.01 and 8.02

I would prefer 8.3 but we are gaining on it. The Green Star polyps are looking less beige and greener. :P

Star_Polyps.jpg


The anemones seem to like the higher PH as well.

Anemones_06_2004.jpg


Thanks for your help and suggestions!

Robert
 

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