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#1
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I'm planning to use a black sand in my new reef system that has no buffering capacity. Is this going to cause me problems?
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#2
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Not at all. Lots of us use no sand at all. I don't beleive sand really buffers the water regardless, the pH just isn't low enough to dissolve aragonite in any significant amount.
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Brad |
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#3
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Ditto, you should be fine using black sand. Just keep it clean.
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This and that. |
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#4
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Quote:
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____________ If people don't die, it wouldn't make living important. And why do we fall? So we can learn to pick ourselves up. |
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#5
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-all i can say is that it works for me, i used caribsea aragonite and my pH is
static at 8.5, doesn't go up or down so no need for baking soda-
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33g fowlr / 20g sump / 400 watt pendant / Euro-Reef RC80~~~~lavendar tang, lemon butterfly, snowflake eel, hawaiian spotted puffer, tomato clown, chomis.. My reef~http://i297.photobucket.com/albums/m...-/P4300459.jpg |
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#6
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pH is not a good measure of buffering capacity or of carbonate hardness. What are you alkalinity levels without using a buffer/builder additive?
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#7
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Well I'm never using baking soda my pH went from 9.0 to 8.8 and now I cant get the sucker down.
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10g softie and LPS tank(SPS soon Live stock -1 Pulsing xinia - Green candy cane - green zoas - GSP - Fake percula clown - Diadem dottyback |