⚠️ This forum has been restored as a read-only archive so the knowledge shared by the community over many years remains available. New registrations and posting are disabled.

All times are UTC + 8 hours




Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 8 posts ] 
Author Message
 Post subject: pH Help !
PostPosted: Feb 14th, '14, 10:15 

Joined: Feb 14th, '14, 09:37
Posts: 2
Gender: Male
Are you human?: yes
Location: Coronado,Ca USA
Hello, Ryan here from sunny San Diego.

Fairly new to Aquaponics.

I have a problem and am out of ideas, need help !

The problem- I cannot maintain a pH of 6.5+ no matter what I do. ( pH up/sea shells/egg shells)

Most recently did a 60% water change (risky but worked for a couple days..., maintained a pH of 6.5 for a few days.

pH is back at 5.5-6.0.

My system- 2 2x4 grow beds / 100 gallon Rubbermaid trough / hydroton clay pebbles for media. I have a 400GPH pump and good size aerator/air pump.

Fish- 6 small channel cats / 2 small Blue Gills / 6 small gold fish.

Water / chemistry - NITRATES/Ammonia a little high but not crazy.

I have a couple big rocks and a piece of 4" PVC in the tank for shelter/protection for the fish. ( already thought this was the issue and removed both, no joy. now back in)

Any and all help/ideas would be great.

Thank you

Ryan


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
    Advertisement
 
 Post subject: Re: pH Help !
PostPosted: Feb 14th, '14, 13:20 
A posting God
A posting God
User avatar

Joined: Mar 9th, '13, 10:44
Posts: 3455
Location: Loomberah NSW
Gender: Male
Are you human?: Im a force of nature
Location: I'm right here
It seems odd that shell grit (not just a couple of whole shells, which don't have enough surface area) couldn't do the job with so few fish.
I add Calcium Hydroxide (Builders Lime) Ca(OH)2, and Potassium Hydroxide (Caustic Potash) KOH alkalis to neutralise the acidification due the nitrifying bacteria doing their job in my system- the additions are only required when the fish are eating a reasonable amount of food. Shell grit, CaCO3, buffers enough against the acidification when I am only feeding small amounts to fingerlings, less than ~50-80g/day, depending on the food.

With only 400 litres of water you would have to be careful about how much you add of any strong alkali- start small and increase until you have the desired adjustment. I'd start with say 1g of Ca(OH)2 dissolved in water and slowly add that to the system. Give it at least 8 hours to fully mix, depends a bit on how often your pump is running, and it helps if you spread it all around the system when adding, and then check pH.
Don't get any in your eyes or on your skin!


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
 Post subject: Re: pH Help !
PostPosted: Feb 14th, '14, 14:02 
A posting God
A posting God
User avatar

Joined: Apr 4th, '11, 13:18
Posts: 2381
Gender: Male
Are you human?: Not before 8am
Location: Perth, Western Australia
A few lumps of clean limestone in the FT.

I've used limestone a number of times in the past with great success, but recently tried shell grit (in fact I'm still trying it) for the first time and found it very ineffective compared to the limestone.


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
 Post subject: Re: pH Help !
PostPosted: Feb 16th, '14, 12:38 

Joined: Feb 14th, '14, 09:37
Posts: 2
Gender: Male
Are you human?: yes
Location: Coronado,Ca USA
I will give the calcium hydroxcide a shot.

Thank you !

Ryan


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
 Post subject: Re: pH Help !
PostPosted: Feb 16th, '14, 14:33 
A posting God
A posting God
User avatar

Joined: Apr 4th, '11, 13:18
Posts: 2381
Gender: Male
Are you human?: Not before 8am
Location: Perth, Western Australia
You need some carbonates in the system, they raise, but also buffer the pH, meaning it takes longer for the pH to move. Carbonates are also required for other processes in the system. The reason your pH is low is because there are no, or very little carbonates in the system. Calcium hydroxide doesn't contain carbonates, so while it will temporarily raise the pH, it won't add any buffering capacity to the system.

Also, a balance must be maintained between Calcium and Potassium, too much of one will lock the other out. This is why most people use two pH raising agents, normally Calcium hydroxide and Potassium bicarbonate, and alternate between the two. The Potassium bicarbonate will also help with buffering.


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
 Post subject: Re: pH Help !
PostPosted: Feb 16th, '14, 16:31 
Bordering on Legend
Bordering on Legend

Joined: Jan 7th, '08, 09:13
Posts: 278
Location: Jandakot
Gender: None specified
Are you human?: yes
Location: WA
We also are struggling with a low pH and low carbonate hardness but high general hardness. Was just reading about adding sodium bicarbonate (rather than adding yet more calcium) but you mention potassium.

Which is better and if potassium where does one get that from and what quantities do we use? We have a 10,000 litre pool with Silver Perch, and a 2000 AP system and both have the same low pH and kH.

Thanks!


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
 Post subject: Re: pH Help !
PostPosted: Feb 16th, '14, 17:38 
A posting God
A posting God
User avatar

Joined: Apr 4th, '11, 13:18
Posts: 2381
Gender: Male
Are you human?: Not before 8am
Location: Perth, Western Australia
I would add some lumps of clean limestone to your systems, but make sure you put them somewhere easily accessible, especially for the swimming pool system, because you may need to remove them at a later date.

It'll take a week or two for the limestone to start having an effect, in the meantime I would add some Potassium bicarbonate (much better for your plants than Sodium) at 1x level teaspoon per 1000L. You don't want to move the system pH more than 0.3 in any 24hr period, so maybe only add half the amount then retest the pH and hour or so later.


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
 Post subject: Re: pH Help !
PostPosted: Feb 16th, '14, 17:47 
Bordering on Legend
Bordering on Legend

Joined: Jan 7th, '08, 09:13
Posts: 278
Location: Jandakot
Gender: None specified
Are you human?: yes
Location: WA
Thanks for that Mr Damage-
we have always had to keep the kH up (our bore water is naturally low) so since very early on have had either (or both) limestone or shell grit in both the pool and AP. It used to be effective, but it hasn't made any difference now for months. With the GH very high it seems timely to add something other than CaCO3.
Potassium bicarbonate is now on the shopping list!
Thanks for your help
d and m


Top
 Profile  
Reply with quote  
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 8 posts ] 

All times are UTC + 8 hours


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
cron

Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group
Portal by phpBB3 Portal © phpBB Türkiye
[ Time : 0.108s | 13 Queries | GZIP : Off ]