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Old 07-28-2008, 05:46 PM   #11 (permalink)
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Default Re: Potassium test results

This has been very interesting to me. I recall that your original question or comment about potassium was about whether it would continue to build up since the plants don't actually consume it like they do nitrates, for example. Have you reached any conclusions about that?

There are only two usable methods for measuring how much CO2 is in the water, that I know of. One is to spend around $2000 on a piece of equipment that measures it directly and very accurately. The other is to use a drop checker, as described in http://www.aquaticplantcentral.com/f...p-checker.html, which gives usable results, but not extremely accurate results.
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Old 07-29-2008, 09:04 AM   #12 (permalink)
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Default Re: Potassium test results

I don’t think I can make any solid conclusions. One thing I have learned is that it is hard to determine the levels of chemicals in your water without testing for them.

Once I got my K level up there seemed to be a sharp drop in algae growth. This could also have been due to increased consumption from the added algae eating fish. (This is called a poorly controlled experiment).

My plan is to do additional water changes this week to bring the level of K and NO3 down. I will continue to do the daily additions of macro/micro nutrients.

Since the daily addition of K/PO4/NO3 is approximately 1/.1/1 it seems from the current levels that PO4 is being used more rapidly (in my tank). I’d like to get my tank water to a K/PO4/NO3 level close to 1/.1/1. Then I could get a better grip on how the K/PO4/NO3 level changes with time.

You’ve probably guessed that I have a chemistry background so this has been a lot of fun for me.
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Old 07-29-2008, 11:06 AM   #13 (permalink)
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Default Re: Potassium test results

Tom Barr tells us that the best way to adjust the growth rate in an aquarium is with the light intensity. Next best, is with nitrate, although this is a distant second. His EI method is aimed at always having the tank non-limited by any of the nutrients, and his typical K/PO4/NO3 dosage is more like 1/.25/1 than 1/.1/1. I think he does this because a shortage of phosphate will become the limit on plant growth and that isn't desirable at all. You might enjoy visiting his forum at http://www.barrreport.com/barrreport.php and discussing this with him.
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Old 08-04-2008, 08:06 AM   #14 (permalink)
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Default Re: Potassium test results

There is a chart based on pH and KH that will give you CO2 concentrations. I'm not at home and dont have access to it but if I remember I will attach it tonite.
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Old 08-04-2008, 08:25 AM   #15 (permalink)
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Default Re: Potassium test results

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There is a chart based on pH and KH that will give you CO2 concentrations. I'm not at home and dont have access to it but if I remember I will attach it tonite.
That chart is based on the equation that relates CO2 concentration to pH and KH, but it is only applicable to water which has no source of alkalinity or acidity other than carbonate and carbonic acid. Our aquarium water rarely fits that criteria, so the chart almost always gives much too high a concentration of CO2 than actually exists in the aquarium.

The concentration of CO2 in water is proportional to one over ten raised to the pH power, so even slight errors in pH, such as by having pH affected by tannins, or phosphates, will badly distort the calculated concentration of CO2. (A change in pH by 1.0 - say from 7 to 6 - results in a change in concentration by a factor of 10 - say from 2 to 20 ppm)

The fact that this chart is published everywhere, in many websites, in books, in magazine articles, etc. doesn't mean it is a good CO2 measuring method. Believe it or not, "everyone" has often been wrong.
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Old 08-04-2008, 08:55 AM   #16 (permalink)
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Default Re: Potassium test results

Here is the update for 8/3/08

K 12 ppm
PO4 0.4 ppm
NO3 12 ppm

There is almost no algae in my tank; so, I’ve started to supplement my fish feeding with algae tablets. In the past my Oto’s have ignored them but faced with starvation they may think otherwise.

I’ve changed my fertilization plan temporarily. I’ve stopped using the standard PPS stock solution and started using only a KHPO4 solution that provided the same level of PO4. I’ll continue to do this until I get closer to the stock solution ratios of K/PO4/NO3 = 1.4/0.1/1.

I am doing about 20% water changes per week.

I’ve upped my lighting to max!
I have 2 x 65 watt Sunpaq 6700 K /10,000K CFL on 12 hours/day and
1 x 150 watt Coralife 6700K HQI on 6 hours/day.
The HQI is about 16” above the tank to reduce intensity.

I’m adding 4 gm CO2 daily (equivalent to 20ppm for my tank).
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Old 08-04-2008, 09:22 AM   #17 (permalink)
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Smile Re: Potassium test results

Quote:
Originally Posted by hoppycalif View Post
Tom Barr tells us that the best way to adjust the growth rate in an aquarium is with the light intensity. Next best, is with nitrate, although this is a distant second. His EI method is aimed at always having the tank non-limited by any of the nutrients, and his typical K/PO4/NO3 dosage is more like 1/.25/1 than 1/.1/1. I think he does this because a shortage of phosphate will become the limit on plant growth and that isn't desirable at all.

Everyone has their own formula!

I am using the schedule recommended for PPS:

In 1 liter bottle:
59 grams K2SO4 (Potassium Sulfate)
65 grams KNO3 (Potassium Nitrate)
6 grams KH2PO4 (Mono Potassium Phosphate)
41 grams MgSO4 (Magnesium Sulfate)
Fill with distilled water and shake well. Let sit overnight.

Dose 1 ml of each solution per ten gallons of tank size.

When I chug this through the fertilator I get the following daily increases:

K 1.41 ppm
PO4 0.11 ppm
NO3 1.05 ppm
Mg 0.11 ppm

This agrees with my own spread sheet.

BTW your question about the ratio of PO4 made me go back to my own spread sheet and I found a mistake in my calculations for K2SO4, which I fixed.
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Old 08-04-2008, 10:36 AM   #18 (permalink)
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Default Re: Potassium test results

Here is a link to the chart I use. It has been adjusted for the inaccuracies others have pointed out unless you have abnormally high phosphate levels and/or other buffers in which case it wont work. The same inaccuracy existes for CO2 test kits i.e. they can be thrown off by buffers. Also, a drop checker can only tell you if you are Low, OK or High - not where you are within each range which can vary considerablely.

http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/aqua/art_plant_co2chart.htm

........sounds a bit like someone has some kinda beef or got out of the wrong side of bed today..........
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Old 08-04-2008, 03:17 PM   #19 (permalink)
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Default Re: Potassium test results

Chuck Gadd's website clearly says his chart and his built in calculator, which is a very nice one, are based on: "The formula used for this calculation is: CO2 (in PPM) = 3 * KH * 10( 7-pH ) where KH is Carbonate Hardness in degrees." This is the standard equation relating CO2/ph/KH, with no corrections at all. Chuck also makes it pretty clear that you can't have phosphates in your water, which most water companies add routinely to keep the pH above 7 to avoid copper piping erosion. And, it follows that anything else in the water that affect the pH, such as tannins or other acids, will also make the equation invalid.

Recently Tom Barr purchased a $1500 instrument that really does measure the concentration of CO2 in the water, independent of pH and KH and other pH affecting substances, accurate to something like +/- 2 ppm, as I recall. He was surprised when he used it to find that he had much less CO2 in his tank water than a drop checker was telling him, and the drop checker gave less CO2 in the water than the pH and KH would tell him. Measuring the concentration of CO2 in water is a very difficult job.
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Old 08-04-2008, 04:09 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Question Re: Potassium test results

Quote:
Originally Posted by hoppycalif View Post
Recently Tom Barr purchased a $1500 instrument that really does measure the concentration of CO2 in the water, independent of pH and KH and other pH affecting substances, accurate to something like +/- 2 ppm, as I recall. He was surprised when he used it to find that he had much less CO2 in his tank water than a drop checker was telling him, and the drop checker gave less CO2 in the water than the pH and KH would tell him. Measuring the concentration of CO2 in water is a very difficult job.

Actually, measuring CO2 in water is an interesting discussion. Do you think we could move it somewhere else where it is more appropiate? I'd add my two cent there.
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