Hi, can I get some advice how to increase KH and PH? I have attached the water parameters readings. I have cardinal tetras and Otto cats in a 10 gallon.
Thank youI would add some lime chip to your filter and then monitor, any movement will be slow but you should find that your hardness and pH values rise. Then it is a case of working out how much water you can change to maintain your tank where you want it.
I find a nitrate of 18ppm using that test strip app will vary depending on light conditions you scan the strip with.Nitrate is an issue though
Thank you for yourI would add some lime chip to your filter and then monitor, any movement will be slow but you should find that your hardness and pH values rise. Then it is a case of working out how much water you can change to maintain your tank where you want it.
Thank you so much . I was also1. I found those JBL test strips are not terribly accurate (love the idea though, they are much more precise than a colour chart judged by eye from a liquid test)
2. If you have cardinals and otos just leave it be - if anything those fish would prefer things with even less pH and kH than that.
3. JBL are just telling the values are too low because they are using an average that could be suitable for a mix of community fish. That is is not the ideal way to keep fish. JBL are just trying to sell you extra chemicals to cure a problem you do not have.
ThanksTraditional strips might be worse because they come with the same inaccuracy but this time you have to rely on your own eyes to judge the colour which probably looks like none of the options and vaguely close to any one of three options. I think test strips can be useful (including the ones you have) but only to get a vague idea if the water quality is consistent when you are too lazy to liquid test.
As discussed in other threads - testing is often not needed anyway. You will see if the fishes behaviour changes, if the tank looks like you need to water change more often or feed less you are probably right. Some of us are weird and find monitoring water quality fun, and when you have problems you ask about online here or elsewhere test results are the first thing asked for (in which case it helps to know what is "normal" for your system), but if your system ain't broke don't fix it.