What do you mean? It takes 14-16 drops of the test liquid to get the color to turn meaning its REALLY high... Wayyyy higher than 240I'm sorry I just got lost your KH is 14-16 on a scale that goes 240
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What do you mean? It takes 14-16 drops of the test liquid to get the color to turn meaning its REALLY high... Wayyyy higher than 240I'm sorry I just got lost your KH is 14-16 on a scale that goes 240
Now I'm really lostWhat do you mean? It takes 14-16 drops of the test liquid to get the color to turn meaning its REALLY high... Wayyyy higher than 240
That is not the same question that you had posted in the first post of this thread.Look what we have done, we have bumped this to the top of the list. But I'm still waiting for the member who can name five soft water fish that live in a pH of eight.
My Question.That is not the same question that you had posted in the first post of this thread.
That question is an oxymoronMy Question.
"Please help me out. Name five fish that live in soft water with a pH of 8.2. GO!!!"
Rocky asked me this question in another thread that was closed. I said I couldn't, he implied that I should be able to. So, I set up this thread to see what member can answer Rockys question to me, that I can't answer.That question is an oxymoron
Each drop added to the test equates to a DGH so if I put 14 drops in before the color switches... It has a very high KH.Now I'm really lost
Planted tanks do show a diurnal change in pH.I’m still totally confused by Ph … I’ve been trying to read up but it’s not generally ‘sticking ’ in my head…
One thing I do keep reading about on this forum though, is to keep the Ph stable rather than keep trying to make it ‘match’ what you want it to be, this leads me to a question…
Im reading from http://fisheries.tamu.edu/files/201...ide-Alkalinity-and-Hardness-in-Fish-Ponds.pdf
and they have a table (Tucker 1984) that says the Ph increases and decreases during daylight/ nighttime hours. So, if I were to test my water at midday, would it have a very different reading to a reading taken at midnight..? How much of a fluctuation is there, and how do the fish cope with this..?
EDIT: this is for ponds, but I assume similar will happen in a lit tank..?
But it doesn’t ‘swing’ enough to cause the fish any stress?The pH is lowest just before the lights turn on and highest just before they turn off.