crushed coral is mainly calcium carbonate. in soft water it only dissolves if the PH is below 7. When it dissolves it pushes the PH up. Once PH reaches 7 it stops dissolving and the PH stops at about 7. Now the final PH of your water depends on everything in your water calcium carbonate is just one part of the PH. So the final PH will very a little pit. For example look at sea water. There is calcium dissolved in the water along with a lot of salts. Sea water has a PH of 8. instead of the fresh water PH of 7.
In my small 5 gallon tank one sea shell is all I need to maintain a PH of 7 and it takes about 1 year for it to dissolve away. Once it is almost gone I add another. The chemistry of calcium carbonate doesn't change over time. You shouldn't need a lot of it in the tank. A cup of it should work. The best place to put it is in the filter since all the water will pass through it in about 30minutes.
Some time ago I read about one guys tank that suddenly went bad he lost fish and plants. In the end it was all traced back to his water pump which failed several days later. His pump had a sealed bearing with oil in it. The seal failed and a very small amount leaked out and he didn't see it. The oil got out and caused the problem Now most pumps in the hobby don't use oil instead they use a metal pin and use water as the lubricant. How he ended getting a pump with oil in it I don't know.
In my small 5 gallon tank one sea shell is all I need to maintain a PH of 7 and it takes about 1 year for it to dissolve away. Once it is almost gone I add another. The chemistry of calcium carbonate doesn't change over time. You shouldn't need a lot of it in the tank. A cup of it should work. The best place to put it is in the filter since all the water will pass through it in about 30minutes.
Honestly this sounds like something like got in your water. If It floats in water and it you had a slight film of it on the surface that would stop gas exchange with the air and bubble would form. And if it gets in the fishes gills the fish would have a hard time getting the oxygen they need. the loss of gas exchange would also cause CO2 to increase which would lower PH.Another thing I forgot to mention was, during the pH drop, the water surface was loaded with bubbles. This whole thing was strange, I have been keeping African cichlids for about 15 years, never saw this and it all happened within a couple of hours.
Some time ago I read about one guys tank that suddenly went bad he lost fish and plants. In the end it was all traced back to his water pump which failed several days later. His pump had a sealed bearing with oil in it. The seal failed and a very small amount leaked out and he didn't see it. The oil got out and caused the problem Now most pumps in the hobby don't use oil instead they use a metal pin and use water as the lubricant. How he ended getting a pump with oil in it I don't know.
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