Quote:
Originally Posted by pterfloth
If you really want accurate alkalinity results then you can do what we do in the water treatment industry, use methyl purple indicator and N/50 sulfuric acid to titrate. The N/50 sulfuric acid is very dilute and harmless. Using a 50 ml sample of tank water, add 4-6 drops of methyl purple indicator and add N/50 acid until the color changes from green to purple. Every ml of acid added is 20 ppm of alkalinity, so 6.5 ml = 130 ppm alkalinity (dKH 7.3). A 4 litre container of N/50 sulfuric acid is about $82.00 from Fisher Scientific. That's good for over 600 tests!
I also use an industrial test method for calcium and magnesium. It's 100% accurate and much cheaper in the long run.
The commercial test kits are not very good and very over-priced. Like the commercial liquid calcium and magnesium additives, the mark-up is scandalous.
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Does a person have to use a 50ml sample of tank water? Could I use half that and then 2-3 drops of methyl purple and then for every 1/2ml of sulfuric acid the solution is 20ppm of alkalinity? I ask because $97.95 for the 4L acid and $13.85 for 120ml of the dye plus some tax and shipping for +600 tests isnt much of a deal. But getting twice that many would then make the idea start to make sense.
The cost looks like it would be about $130 for 600 tests which means I would get 4.6 tests for every $1 spent. A seachem alkalinity kit is about $18 for 75 tests which is equal to 4.1 tests per $1. Then again most of us only test once a week at most so 600 or so tests would last 12 years... I think this might require a group order.
https://ecat.fishersci.ca/(fw4tt355o...aspx?cid=20639
https://ecat.fishersci.ca/(fw4tt355o...px?cid=3640757