calcium, alk, magnesium diy dosing sources and techniques
Glad to see a reef chemistry forum here.
Thought I would just share my experiences with this DIY method:
An Improved Do-it-Yourself Two-Part Calcium and Alkalinity Supplement System by Randy Holmes-Farley - Reefkeeping.com
with the aid of this on line calculator:
Reef Chemistry Calculator
First get yourself calcium, alk, and magnesium test kits that have sufficient precision to measure 20ppm differences in calcium and magnesium. salifert is good as is seachem. (My first calcium test kit was only precise enough to 50ppm which is not very useful when you want 375ppm to be 400ppm)
Then look around for the ingredients.
Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda): Arm and Hammer from the grocery store
Magnesium Sulfate (Epsom Salts) drug store or grocery store.
3 1 gallon containers you label as magnesium, calcium, alk (baking soda)
(I find it helpful to also label the mixing instructions also). One gallon juice/drink containers work well. I would use the same brands as different containers vary slightly in the actual volume
Calcium chloride: Ice melter for driveways up north or from redi mix concrete places. It is used to speed hardening of concrete at colder temperatures. 50 pound bags are like $25 or so. Cal-chlor is anhydrous (more concentrated) and a 25 pound bag here is like $9 or so.
Magnesium chloride is the hardest to find. And more expensive then calcium chloride. It is used as an ice melter also so you could be lucky enough for find some up north. Be sure it is 100% magnesium chloride. Some ice melters reduce costs by having a mix of magnesium chloride with rock salt and calcium chloride. I get mine here from a local industrial supplier who does not charge shipping ~$30 for a 50 pound bag.
The industrial supplier here charges $40-$50 total for 1 50 pound bag of calcium chloride and 1 50 pound bag of magnesium chloride. These are so inexpensive I just give them away at local club meetings and frag swaps.
When you get the calcium chloride and magnesium chloride I recommend you immediately store those in labeled plastic containers that are water tight. I use 1g ice cream tubs, 3 pound coffee (plastic) cans, and pretzel, trail mix containers. If you open the 50 pounds bags and get some water in them, the chlorides will immediately harden and be hard to work with. The smaller containers are really nice to keep the chlorides dry and usable.
I do recommend you buy a scale capable of measuring 300mg weight. You can use a measuring cup but I find that less reliable and a scale only costs $10 or so.
actual operation:
The first thing you do is measure where your tank is currently at and use the calculator to get it at some value. Say 1350ppm magnesium, ~400ppm calcium and ~10dkh alk. Dose the magnesium first then the other two. Of course it is best to perhaps dose 1/2 over two days but with the calculator it is unlikely you will have problems.
Then mix up 1 gallon solutions for the magnesium, calcium, alk per the instructions of the article. (I use the second formula because I am too lazy to bake the baking soda. :wink
Then you measure alk and when alk has dropped below some value you dose equal amounts from the calcium and alk solutions. When 1 gallon of those solutions is used up you dose 300ml of the magnesium solutions. Then make up new calcium, alk solutions.
I also add just a touch of Mrs. Wages pickling lime to my top off water.
I think you will find this method to be inexpensive and easy to implement. The hard part is actually reading those articles and get everything setup.
My .02
Glad to see a reef chemistry forum here.
Thought I would just share my experiences with this DIY method:
An Improved Do-it-Yourself Two-Part Calcium and Alkalinity Supplement System by Randy Holmes-Farley - Reefkeeping.com
with the aid of this on line calculator:
Reef Chemistry Calculator
First get yourself calcium, alk, and magnesium test kits that have sufficient precision to measure 20ppm differences in calcium and magnesium. salifert is good as is seachem. (My first calcium test kit was only precise enough to 50ppm which is not very useful when you want 375ppm to be 400ppm)
Then look around for the ingredients.
Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda): Arm and Hammer from the grocery store
Magnesium Sulfate (Epsom Salts) drug store or grocery store.
3 1 gallon containers you label as magnesium, calcium, alk (baking soda)
(I find it helpful to also label the mixing instructions also). One gallon juice/drink containers work well. I would use the same brands as different containers vary slightly in the actual volume
Calcium chloride: Ice melter for driveways up north or from redi mix concrete places. It is used to speed hardening of concrete at colder temperatures. 50 pound bags are like $25 or so. Cal-chlor is anhydrous (more concentrated) and a 25 pound bag here is like $9 or so.
Magnesium chloride is the hardest to find. And more expensive then calcium chloride. It is used as an ice melter also so you could be lucky enough for find some up north. Be sure it is 100% magnesium chloride. Some ice melters reduce costs by having a mix of magnesium chloride with rock salt and calcium chloride. I get mine here from a local industrial supplier who does not charge shipping ~$30 for a 50 pound bag.
The industrial supplier here charges $40-$50 total for 1 50 pound bag of calcium chloride and 1 50 pound bag of magnesium chloride. These are so inexpensive I just give them away at local club meetings and frag swaps.
When you get the calcium chloride and magnesium chloride I recommend you immediately store those in labeled plastic containers that are water tight. I use 1g ice cream tubs, 3 pound coffee (plastic) cans, and pretzel, trail mix containers. If you open the 50 pounds bags and get some water in them, the chlorides will immediately harden and be hard to work with. The smaller containers are really nice to keep the chlorides dry and usable.
I do recommend you buy a scale capable of measuring 300mg weight. You can use a measuring cup but I find that less reliable and a scale only costs $10 or so.
actual operation:
The first thing you do is measure where your tank is currently at and use the calculator to get it at some value. Say 1350ppm magnesium, ~400ppm calcium and ~10dkh alk. Dose the magnesium first then the other two. Of course it is best to perhaps dose 1/2 over two days but with the calculator it is unlikely you will have problems.
Then mix up 1 gallon solutions for the magnesium, calcium, alk per the instructions of the article. (I use the second formula because I am too lazy to bake the baking soda. :wink
Then you measure alk and when alk has dropped below some value you dose equal amounts from the calcium and alk solutions. When 1 gallon of those solutions is used up you dose 300ml of the magnesium solutions. Then make up new calcium, alk solutions.
I also add just a touch of Mrs. Wages pickling lime to my top off water.
I think you will find this method to be inexpensive and easy to implement. The hard part is actually reading those articles and get everything setup.
My .02
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