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I'm looking to get my Alkalinity up to an appropriate level. I'm looking to use Reef Code B. Seems like there are lots of options. Reef Code B seems to be the easiest in my mind. It's already mixed and in a liquid form and BRS has an easy to use calculator on their site that has Reef Code B as an option. So I'm thinking that's the route I'm going to go. I haven't settled yet on what I'll use to maintain ALK, whether it's Reef Code B, Kalkwasser or All For Reef.One can, but what is the scenario where you want to?
Using this calculator, it recommends 4 grams of baking soda dissolved into RODI water. It doesn't mention how much RODI water. Any tips on the math or how to figure out how to divide this dose over a period of 2-4 weeks so I don't shock the corals?You could just use baking soda. Cheap and easy and no worse that reef alk supplements. Calculators readily available and you probably already own it.
Using this calculator, it recommends 4 grams of baking soda dissolved into RODI water. It doesn't mention how much RODI water. Any tips on the math or how to figure out how to divide this dose over a period of 2-4 weeks so I don't shock the corals?
Any advantage/disadvantage to doing it this way versus BRS Liquid Sodium Bicarbonate method using 1 gallon of RODI water? Other than not needing a dosing pump. Will it be easier on the tank (less spikes/drops) if I dose it continuously over 8 days using a dosing pump and the calculations below?The amount of water does not matter as long as it dissolves. At 6.2 dKH aiming for 8 dKH, I’d split it into 8 doses, so 2 per day for 4 days.
Any advantage/disadvantage to doing it this way versus BRS Liquid Sodium Bicarbonate method using 1 gallon of RODI water? Other than not needing a dosing pump. Will it be easier on the tank (less spikes/drops) if I dose it continuously over 8 days using a dosing pump and the calculations below?
From BRS Calculator for liquid Sodium Bicarbonate;
"
RESULTS:
51.43 ml or 1.74 fl oz or 10.29 tsp
With any clean 1 gallon container add 2/3 gallon of RO/DI or distilled water and then add 1 1/8 cups of BRS Sodium Bicarbonate. Shake the container well, then top the gallon container off with RO/DI or distilled water and allow it to dissolve fully."
It’s the same thing. FWIW, the BRS recipe is my diy anyway.
None of these methods need a dosing pump for adding 0.5 dKH. But there’s also nothing wrong with doing so.
0.5 dKH? Isn't the increase I'm looking to achieve 1.8 dKH?
I wasn't sure if diluting the sodium bicarbonate into the gallon of water and spreading the ~52ml dose out over 8 days would dilute the effectiveness, turning it into more of a "maintenance dose" rather than a "adjustment dose". I'm not familiar with the mechanics and chemistry, and if the effects of the sodium bicarbonate would accumulate over the 8 days no matter how much/when it's dosed.
I'm just guessing that spreading out the dose over days would be less stressful to the corals. I remember seeing in a video, I think WWC video, that a change like one this large should be over a week or two.
@Randy Holmes-Farley does sodium bicarbonate have an effect on Magnesium? My magnesium levels are already a little high at 1540ppm