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#1
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![]() The acid *should* get any residual organics, which *might* include the scent chemicals. You may have to go multiple cycles of RO/DI water, perhaps even with carbon, before you can be sure.
Charles
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Where did my rum go?! Success in this hobby does not count how you spend your money, it counts how you spend your time. |
#2
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![]() Ok thx I will soak it in ro/di water a couple times with a power head and one of those hang on filters with carbon after I do my acid wash tmr.
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#3
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![]() Whatever the lemon scent is, it won't be organic. Chlorine bleach disintegrates organics, that's how it works. And if you're doing the acid bath to get rid of phosphates, then you'll actually need to lose a significant amount of mass to be successful. It works by removing a layer of rock that has adsorbed phosphates, if you don't remove enough then you're not removing phosphates. Depending on the porosity of the rock, I've heard of acid baths removing 25% of the dry mass of the rock.
Carbon will probably help with removing whatever the lemon scent chemical is. Also soaking in RODI will pull it into the water for removal |
#4
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![]() No way 25% lose of rock? Can't be that much
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#5
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![]() While I'm not sure that's a real number, you do need to remove a layer of every external and internal surface to unbind the PO4. You're gonna lose some mass
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Brad |
#6
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![]() Maybe 10% for your average rock, but one guy on reef central did it with pukani and lost 25%, didn't even look like the same rock
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#7
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![]() Do u guys think only bleach is good enough or maybe like a 30min acid bath as well to minimize mass loss?
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