This converts to 14.5 dH and 260 ppm, which are the two units used in fish keeping. It is indeed hard.My water is hard at 104 Ca mg/L.
This converts to 14.5 dH and 260 ppm, which are the two units used in fish keeping. It is indeed hard.My water is hard at 104 Ca mg/L.
For tetra you need a shoal of at least 6 and the more the better. I have a 55 gallon tetra tank which gives them plenty of room to swim, 64 liter is around 15 gallons which does not give a lot of room depending on if it is a long or tall tank. Also tetra are soft water fish. I use RO water to soften my water. I keep my hard water fish in separate hard water tanks. If you have hard water fancy guppies may work out. Do you know what type of water you have? soft or hard and the GH and PH levels?
The only way to reduce hardness is by mixing your tap water with pure water - usually reverse osmosis (RO) water. Half and half would reduce the hardness to 7 dH. But if you were to do this, you would need to have some RO water to hand at all times in case you ever needed to do an emergency water change.
RO water can be purchased from some fish shops or you can buy the equipment to make your own.
Water softeners 'soften' the water by removing the hardness minerals and replacing them with something else. RO water just removes them and doesn't replace them with anything else.
Living in a soft water area I have not needed to use RO, but other members have and I'm sure they'll be able to point you in the right direction
Water softeners shouldn't be used for fish. There are different types.
The ones that use salt swap the hardness minerals, calcium and magnesium, with sodium should not be used for fish. No fresh water fish have evolved to cope with sodium in the water. And soft water fish need water with a low TDS (total dissolved solids). Swapping one mineral for another won't lower TDS. The same applies to the type which swap the hardness minerals with potassium.
Another type swaps the minerals with hydrogen ions (Brita filters are this type). The problem with these is the pH. pH is a measure of the amount of hydrogen ions; the more there are the lower the pH. We used to have a Brita jug, and that dropped the pH from 7.6 to off the bottom of the scale so somewhere less than 6.0. I have no idea how low the pH actually was.
I would say so.Does my friend have too many fish in his tank? All them fish in a 12 gallon tank sounds a bit too much...
I see so RO water is the only option really... Luckily I checked in with my local pet shop and they provide it. So if my tank is 64L(14 gallons) should I try to have half of that 32L pure water at all times?
Does my friend have too many fish in his tank? All them fish in a 12 gallon tank sounds a bit too much...