MarineMoney
Fish Fanatic
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2006
- Messages
- 69
- Reaction score
- 0
Hi,
I've a 40Gallon planted tank, sand substrate unfortuntely...not the best for plant roots in my experience. However my plants are sustaining but not flourishing, so im thinking about giving a DIY CO2 unit a try. .I'm aware that I may need to use two bottles for enough co2 production as my tank is a fair size.
I know what I need in terms of equipment, im going to go for the soda bottle technique but am worried about possible PH crashes....I know that a home system might not produce masses of co2 but how likely are PH crashes? If I keep the co2 at a constant rate will this minimise the chance of a PH crash?
I've got some delicate fish, ones which ive had for a few years and I really dont want to get this wrong! Also the PH has always been pretty high for the fish, my mum used pure coral sand unknowingly in her tropical tank when I wasnt living at home and when i returned we transferred her fish in to our new aquarium, i thought it best to transfer a portion of coral sand aswell as new substrate into our new tank to avoid a massive PH drop for the fish...so my point is a crash to PH 4 or 5 from 8 would be a complete disaster.
Also this may sound like a stupid question, but where should I place the bottle in relation to height to the tank to ensure successful transport along the pipe and into the aquarium?
Do I need a check valve on the pipe or can I go without one?
Alot of questions I know but I like to be prepared for every possibility.
thanks
I've a 40Gallon planted tank, sand substrate unfortuntely...not the best for plant roots in my experience. However my plants are sustaining but not flourishing, so im thinking about giving a DIY CO2 unit a try. .I'm aware that I may need to use two bottles for enough co2 production as my tank is a fair size.
I know what I need in terms of equipment, im going to go for the soda bottle technique but am worried about possible PH crashes....I know that a home system might not produce masses of co2 but how likely are PH crashes? If I keep the co2 at a constant rate will this minimise the chance of a PH crash?
I've got some delicate fish, ones which ive had for a few years and I really dont want to get this wrong! Also the PH has always been pretty high for the fish, my mum used pure coral sand unknowingly in her tropical tank when I wasnt living at home and when i returned we transferred her fish in to our new aquarium, i thought it best to transfer a portion of coral sand aswell as new substrate into our new tank to avoid a massive PH drop for the fish...so my point is a crash to PH 4 or 5 from 8 would be a complete disaster.
Also this may sound like a stupid question, but where should I place the bottle in relation to height to the tank to ensure successful transport along the pipe and into the aquarium?
Do I need a check valve on the pipe or can I go without one?
Alot of questions I know but I like to be prepared for every possibility.
thanks