Reef Central Online Community
Hellolights

Home Forum Here you can view your subscribed threads, work with private messages and edit your profile and preferences View New Posts View Today's Posts

Find other members Frequently Asked Questions Search Reefkeeping ...an online magazine for marine aquarists Support our sponsors and mention Reef Central

Go Back   Reef Central Online Community > General Interest Forums > Reef Discussion
Register Blogs FAQ Calendar Mark Forums Read

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 11/05/2009, 01:18 AM   #26
tankjunky
Registered Member
 
tankjunky's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Vacaville CA
Posts: 1,072
So I tested some things again. SG is slowly going up. Alk leveled off at 4.5 meq/l. . . 12.6dkh.


tankjunky is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11/05/2009, 02:07 AM   #27
uncleof6
Premium Member
 
uncleof6's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: San Diego. CA
Posts: 3,156
Quote:
Originally Posted by tmz View Post
I don't know what they are or where they came from or in what context they should be used, if any.
Calcium carbonate which is what corals and other calcifying organisms produce is about 20ppm calcium for every 2.8 dkh(1 meq/l) consumed so it is often necessary to supplement alkalinity in high consumption systems.
Maintaining a range of 7 to 11 dkh(2.5 to 4.0meq/l) with calcium north of 400ppm is all you need.
FWIW, my system runs well with calcium at 550ppm, alkalinity 9.5 and magnesium at 1450ppm at sg of 1.026 fwiw. Bumping alkalinity around to catch up with calcium can be harmful( spiky alkalinity can upset coral calcification activitiy, raise ph and may result in abiotic precipitation of calcium carbonate ,for example) It makes no sense at all to me.
Keeping alkalinity relatively constant within range is what's important.

btw ,many salt mixes carry in calcium in excess of 500 ppm.
Source: "The Reef Aquarium - Volume 3,” by Julian Sprung and Charles Delbeek. As for the comment about giving bad advice: I gave no advice what so ever. It was not asked for in the context of my post, that I am aware of. All due respect to Randy Holmes-Farley, but just as I have not followed Dr. Ron Shimek's work, neither have I followed his.

I see no reason whatsoever to purchase a salt mix that has a calcium content that exceeds natural seawater by
by almost 25%. Hype, hype, and more hype.

J


__________________
I am a PRO, do not try this at home.

On Sales and Marketing: If it sounds too good to be true, trust and believe-- it ain't.

Current Tank Info: 240 5' wide Reef
uncleof6 is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 11/05/2009, 02:13 AM   #28
porthios
Registered Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: colorado
Posts: 625
I see no reason whatsoever to purchase a salt mix that has a calcium content that exceeds natural seawater by almost 25%.

to offset the supplementation that would otherwise be (and often still is) required were the content equal to that found in NSW.

de oppresso liber btw


__________________
- jason

homepage -> build thread..

Current Tank Info: 525g display with several supporting subsystems..
porthios is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11/05/2009, 05:32 PM   #29
uncleof6
Premium Member
 
uncleof6's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: San Diego. CA
Posts: 3,156
Quote:
Originally Posted by porthios View Post
I see no reason whatsoever to purchase a salt mix that has a calcium content that exceeds natural seawater by almost 25%.

to offset the supplementation that would otherwise be (and often still is) required were the content equal to that found in NSW.

de oppresso liber btw
Well that certainly is a "reason" however, there is no scientific basis to do this. It is nothing more than a marketing scheme, to get additional sales-- by baffling the consumer with............. very much like another "miracle" type substance, that by analysis is nothing more than silica sand, and silica sand is dirt cheap

Jim


__________________
I am a PRO, do not try this at home.

On Sales and Marketing: If it sounds too good to be true, trust and believe-- it ain't.

Current Tank Info: 240 5' wide Reef
uncleof6 is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 11/05/2009, 05:54 PM   #30
BeanMachine
Premium Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Tustin, CA
Posts: 739
Quote:
Originally Posted by tankjunky View Post
So I tested some things again. SG is slowly going up. Alk leveled off at 4.5 meq/l. . . 12.6dkh.
I'm enjoying the read.

Your alk is a little high IMO. Where's your calcium at now?


BeanMachine is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11/06/2009, 01:40 AM   #31
tankjunky
Registered Member
 
tankjunky's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Vacaville CA
Posts: 1,072
calcium went to 410


tankjunky is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11/06/2009, 05:44 AM   #32
uncleof6
Premium Member
 
uncleof6's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: San Diego. CA
Posts: 3,156
Now I will put a context to my original post. The relationship between calcium and alkalinity, is science, not bucket chemistry.

calcium 410 alkalinity 12.6 dKh.

It is out of balance, alkalinity high in relation to calcium.

Using these figures only, not what they might be today....

Do not dose a balanced supplement. This would only cause the alkalinity to rise, increasing the imbalance. Dose only calcium, or the calcium part of a two part supplement. This will raise the calcium level, but the alkalinity will lower (as it is used up.) Do not raise levels quickly. You have to keep close track of what is going on. A balance will be reached (per chart) and then you can start using a balanced supplement. You can use none to decrease the levels, or more to increase the levels within the range. Once balanced, as long as your magnesium level is > 1200 ppm, (most prefer higher at 1300 + ppm) the balance will be maintained as calcium and alkalinity are used at equal rates. If alkalinity is low in relation to calcium, bring the dkh up slowly, calcium will drop (as it is used up.)

This gives you a firm handle on this aspect of reef chemistry, that can be duplicated any time necessary to correct high or low values.(of either or both) Rather than anywhere in the range as long as calcium is between x and y bucket chemistry approach. In terms of marine systems, bucket chemistry is just bad science. Stability and balance is good science.

Jim


__________________
I am a PRO, do not try this at home.

On Sales and Marketing: If it sounds too good to be true, trust and believe-- it ain't.

Current Tank Info: 240 5' wide Reef
uncleof6 is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 11/06/2009, 10:59 AM   #33
tmz
Premium Member
 
tmz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: West Seneca NY
Posts: 10,698
You really need to read the whole chapter 5.pgs 199-245 of the Reef Aquarium Vol 3.(Chapter 4 is helpful as well) and understand it more before suggesting that others raise alkalinity to very high and potentially harmful levels to match relatively common calcium values( in the higher ranges).
.Please stop doing that and claiming it's science. It's a confused out of context interpretation and application.
Reading beyond Sprung and Delbeek and Dr Shimek ( all excellent resources) would be a good idea too if you want to get a handle on basic reef chemsitry .Much of the chemistry in Sprung and Delbeek's work cites Dr Farely,btw.There are also a number of his helpful articles listed at the top of the Reef chemsitry forum as well as a dosing calculator and a breakout of the alkalinity ,calcium and magnesium for most salt mixes which may help you gain a useful level of understanding.

As for hype, many salt mixes happen to have high calcium(>500ppm calcium and magnesium > 1300ppm) which is neither a necessarily good or bad thing
It's not hype. It just is.As such it points out how temerarious it is to push alkalinty up to match calcium as you recommend . Do you actually run a tank this way?

The chart which is on page 207 of the Reef Aquairum Vol 3 ,simply represents what calcium and alkalinity levels would be if they perfectly matched the consumption of alkalinity and calcium in calcium carbonate preciptiation. As such it is reference for calculating supplements .You are misapplying it. It does not imply nor is it a guide to optimal reef tank levels for these two major ions.

Maintaining calcium and alkalinity within recommended ranges is what is needed:

dkh 7 to 11 dkh.

calcium 400 plus.

Either can be a higher but too much of one or the other coupled with high ph may cause precipitation. Keeping magnesium over 1200ppm helps maintain alkalinity and calcium at higher levels.
FWIW my system runs well with good growth an color at 550ppm calcium, 10 dkh and 1450ppm magnesium . if I jumped the alkalinty to match that in an exentsion of the chart .it would take dkh well over 20 which would cause ph to spike , calcium and alkalinity to fall out solution and kill a bunch of things along the way.


__________________
Tom

Current Tank Info: 500g system consisting of a 120g reef sps mixed,a 90g lps,a 90g sps dominant,a 30g breeder lps frag tank ,a 40g sps frag tank,a 20g refugium,a29g refugium, an 88gal sump with live rock and rubble. Calcium reactor and kalk doser , mh pc and vho
tmz is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 11/06/2009, 11:40 AM   #34
tmz
Premium Member
 
tmz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: West Seneca NY
Posts: 10,698
[QUOTE=T Man;15970609]I beg to differ, I've been observing sweeper tentacles in leathers for years.

: Well, the links don't work . Which "leathers" have you observed put out stingeres..Never, saw nepthea, sinularia, litpopyton,sacrophyton,capnella or any other coral commonly called a leather put out stingers , nor have I ever seen a reference to this behavior until now. If theydo I'd like to learn more about it. They do shed skin periodicaly which doesn't really look like a stinger but I supposed could be misidentified.In any case ,they all realease toxins. Perhaps you are thinking of a euphyllia or favia which are commonly refered to as lps corals.


__________________
Tom

Current Tank Info: 500g system consisting of a 120g reef sps mixed,a 90g lps,a 90g sps dominant,a 30g breeder lps frag tank ,a 40g sps frag tank,a 20g refugium,a29g refugium, an 88gal sump with live rock and rubble. Calcium reactor and kalk doser , mh pc and vho
tmz is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 11/06/2009, 03:24 PM   #35
uncleof6
Premium Member
 
uncleof6's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: San Diego. CA
Posts: 3,156
Quote:
Originally Posted by tmz View Post
You really need to read the whole chapter 5.pgs 199-245 of the Reef Aquarium Vol 3.(Chapter 4 is helpful as well) and understand it more before suggesting that others raise alkalinity to very high and potentially harmful levels to match relatively common calcium values( in the higher ranges).
.Please stop doing that and claiming it's science. It's a confused out of context interpretation and application.
Reading beyond Sprung and Delbeek and Dr Shimek ( all excellent resources) would be a good idea too if you want to get a handle on basic reef chemsitry .Much of the chemistry in Sprung and Delbeek's work cites Dr Farely,btw.There are also a number of his helpful articles listed at the top of the Reef chemsitry forum as well as a dosing calculator and a breakout of the alkalinity ,calcium and magnesium for most salt mixes which may help you gain a useful level of understanding.

As for hype, many salt mixes happen to have high calcium(>500ppm calcium and magnesium > 1300ppm) which is neither a necessarily good or bad thing
It's not hype. It just is.As such it points out how temerarious it is to push alkalinty up to match calcium as you recommend . Do you actually run a tank this way?

The chart which is on page 207 of the Reef Aquairum Vol 3 ,simply represents what calcium and alkalinity levels would be if they perfectly matched the consumption of alkalinity and calcium in calcium carbonate preciptiation. As such it is reference for calculating supplements .You are misapplying it. It does not imply nor is it a guide to optimal reef tank levels for these two major ions.

Maintaining calcium and alkalinity within recommended ranges is what is needed:

dkh 7 to 11 dkh.

calcium 400 plus.

Either can be a higher but too much of one or the other coupled with high ph may cause precipitation. Keeping magnesium over 1200ppm helps maintain alkalinity and calcium at higher levels.
FWIW my system runs well with good growth an color at 550ppm calcium, 10 dkh and 1450ppm magnesium . if I jumped the alkalinty to match that in an exentsion of the chart .it would take dkh well over 20 which would cause ph to spike , calcium and alkalinity to fall out solution and kill a bunch of things along the way.
Again, read the post. I HAVE NOT RECOMMENDED THAT ALKALINITY BE RAISED TO A VERY HIGH LEVEL OR OUT OF RANGE. Calcium range: 400 - 450 ppm. Per chart this dictates the alkalinity range as: 5.6 - 12.6 dKh. Natural seawater has an alkalinity in the 7 - 8 dKh range. Natural seawater has a calcium level that is about 1.2% by weight of the solids (410 ppm). I have seen a couple different recommendations for dKh levels in saltwater aquraiums, generally 7 - 10 dKH, (sometimes 11 dKh.) This further limits the range of calcium, if you have an interest in maintaining natural proportions. I don't see any reason, to use levels that are out of proportion with, or deviate far from, natural levels. Nature is much smarter than any of us.

You prefer to use calculators and any old number will do, that is fine-- I really don't care. But you are extrapolating the chart out, and creating your own context, so certainly you can accuse me of being confused and out of context.


__________________
I am a PRO, do not try this at home.

On Sales and Marketing: If it sounds too good to be true, trust and believe-- it ain't.

Current Tank Info: 240 5' wide Reef
uncleof6 is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 11/06/2009, 03:41 PM   #36
tmz
Premium Member
 
tmz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: West Seneca NY
Posts: 10,698
No need to maintain calcium at levels higher than natural seawater but no harm in it either.If the tank has high calcium there is no need to chase it with alkalinity boosting.If you want to lower it just add enough alkalinity( such as baking soda) slowly to match consumption and hold it at a desired level for your system,generally between 7 and 11 dkh for a period of time. It may take weeks since calcium is used much more slowly than alkalinity.For 20ppm calcium, 1 meq/l or 2.8 dkh of alkalinity will be consumed.

In some cases if you happen to be using a high calcium salt for example, you may not even have to dose calcium very often if at all.


__________________
Tom

Current Tank Info: 500g system consisting of a 120g reef sps mixed,a 90g lps,a 90g sps dominant,a 30g breeder lps frag tank ,a 40g sps frag tank,a 20g refugium,a29g refugium, an 88gal sump with live rock and rubble. Calcium reactor and kalk doser , mh pc and vho
tmz is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 11/06/2009, 05:37 PM   #37
porthios
Registered Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: colorado
Posts: 625
Well that certainly is a "reason" however, there is no scientific basis to do this. It is nothing more than a marketing scheme, to get additional sales-- by baffling the consumer with............. very much like another "miracle" type substance, that by analysis is nothing more than silica sand, and silica sand is dirt cheap

sorry. i wasn't clear. it's not science, just math. given sufficient size and frequency of water changes, you can keep ca/alk/mg at NSW levels using a salt with >NSW levels of the same, letting you avoid additional supplementation methods (ca reactor, two part, kalk, etc..).

i wouldn't run a system that way. i'm just sayin..


__________________
- jason

homepage -> build thread..

Current Tank Info: 525g display with several supporting subsystems..
porthios is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11/06/2009, 08:40 PM   #38
tankjunky
Registered Member
 
tankjunky's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Vacaville CA
Posts: 1,072
did a 10 gallon water change today.

Just tested again,

Ca-440
Alk-4meq/4. . .11.2Dkh
Sg-1.024

I have a Mg kit and suplements coming hopefully next week, placed the order last nite


tankjunky is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11/07/2009, 02:39 AM   #39
T Man
~PPPPPPP~
 
T Man's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Emerald City
Posts: 938
Quote:
Originally Posted by tmz View Post
: Well, the links don't work . Which "leathers" have you observed put out stingeres..Never, saw nepthea, sinularia, litpopyton,sacrophyton,capnella or any other coral commonly called a leather put out stingers , nor have I ever seen a reference to this behavior until now. If theydo I'd like to learn more about it. They do shed skin periodicaly which doesn't really look like a stinger but I supposed could be misidentified.In any case ,they all realease toxins. Perhaps you are thinking of a euphyllia or favia which are commonly refered to as lps corals.
I don't know why the links don't work, but my observation was of the sacrophyton and sinularia. The biologist in one of the articles was skeptical also until seeing it first hand - I got the info off google under sweeper tentacles coral leathers...it's there.


__________________
“If you want to build a ship, don't drum up people together to collect wood and don't assign them tasks and work, but rather teach them to long for the endless immensity of the sea” ~ Antoine de Saint-Exupery

Current Tank Info: 210g LR DSB mixed 40g sump with mangroves in mud. 125g BB (FOWLR)
T Man is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11/07/2009, 10:20 AM   #40
tmz
Premium Member
 
tmz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: West Seneca NY
Posts: 10,698
Ok, thanks for the google search information. On my computer the links you posted just showed up "page not found".I read several of the links on the google search including some of your previously posted links. I found one claimed observation( on pet education)of "fine ill defined sweepers", no photos, from a leather which I surmise may have just been skin shed. By and large all of the write up note sweepers as an aggression mechanism for hard corals which is consistent with my experience and understanding But thanks for the information,it's always worth hearing about new anecdotal observations. Do you have any photos of your observations?


__________________
Tom

Current Tank Info: 500g system consisting of a 120g reef sps mixed,a 90g lps,a 90g sps dominant,a 30g breeder lps frag tank ,a 40g sps frag tank,a 20g refugium,a29g refugium, an 88gal sump with live rock and rubble. Calcium reactor and kalk doser , mh pc and vho
tmz is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 11/08/2009, 11:14 PM   #41
tankjunky
Registered Member
 
tankjunky's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Vacaville CA
Posts: 1,072
Today I noticed a few new polyps on my zoas, one on my luner eclips zoas, two on my raptors rainbow, and one on my pink zoas.


tankjunky is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11/13/2009, 03:59 PM   #42
tankjunky
Registered Member
 
tankjunky's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Vacaville CA
Posts: 1,072
Mag was at 1150, Slowly raising up to 1600. This will also kill off whats left of any hair algea too rite


tankjunky is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:34 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Use of this web site is subject to the terms and conditions described in the user agreement.
Reef Central™ Reef Central, LLC. Copyright ©1999-2009