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I leave my air stones on 24/7.
I leave my air stones on 24/7.
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It is a few years since I used a Brita jug so they may have changed the cartridges since then. My cartridges dropped the pH from 7.6 to off the bottom of the API liquid tester scale. The reason? They used an ion exchange resin which swapped metal ions for hydrogen ions, and pH is an upside down measure of the amount of hydrogen ions. The more hydrogen ions there are the lower the pH. The website now just says that Maxtra cartridges contain ion exchange resins but give no details.
Brita's website's FAQ section used to contain a warning not to use the filtered water in aquariums.
The way to test pH is to run a glass of plain tap water and a glass of filtered water. Test them both immediately, then let them stand and test again next day. Then post all four readings on here
Welcome to our forum!
I leave my air stones on 24/7.
That nitrate reading doesn't make sense if it was 10ppm before the water change and 40ppm after. What is the nitrate in your tap water?
As @essjay says, any nitrite is dangerous. Keep testing that and if it goes up at all do another change. In the meantime it will help if you feed your fish less (two or 3 times a week is enough, and only as much as they can eat in 30 seconds). Once your ammonia and nitrite have stayed at zero for 48 hours we can consider your stocking options.
Ok I really disagree with this water hardness issue. I purchase most of my fish from LiveAquaria and they list the parameters needed for their fish. They post KH NOT GH and they post Ph. But many people on this forum say only GH matters, and PH and KH does not matter. If that's the case then why would one of the largest online Internet fish sellers refer to PH and KH and completely ignore GH. I've also read multiple articles (I'll try to find some links to them so I can post them here) that strongly emphasize the importance of KH and the unimportance of GH. So what's the deal? Is this a controversial issue in the fish world? I am a relative newbie but I read, read and read so I feel somewhat educated by now. I've found articles emphasizing KH while other emphasize GH so it sounds like a somewhat controversial issue. Since I buy my fish there - I follow their guidelines and look at KH and PH rather than GH.
I do have one question, my filter (fluval 206) has the ability to reduce the flow. Does reducing have any effect on bacteria build up in giving them more time to anchor to bio media?