I have two of these and would be nice to buy the Reagent in larger volume - I figure it is some type of standard acid. Any of you smart people figure out an alternative yet?
Thanks!
Thanks!
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It is easy to figure out the titrant (or, in any case, any mineral acid will do), but you also need to know the exact concentration, which we usually do not.
FWIW, it is easy to DIY the whole tset if you have a pH meter:
A DIY Alkalinity Test: By Randy Holmes-Farley - REEFEDITION
https://www.reef2reef.com/blog/a-diy-alkalinity-test-by-randy-holmes-farley
Very good, thank you. So if I follow the above test using the KHG reagent to say a standard solution 8 dkh to figure out the volume of reagent to drop ph to 4.5 and then through trial and error using that volume to come up with the concentration using mineral acid/rodi mix? Do you think that is feasible ?
Perfect thanks for the Info. I want to do this because I want to continue to use the KHG as it is automated and I made the investment, however, I want to make my own reagent in a larger volume cheaper vs the expensive 1500ml current reagent X2 which runs out every 2 months and cost 30 a month to run two units. Thanks!!!I cannot really see why you would want to do that, rather than just use the DIY method instead, but yes, it will work. The DIY method alone will be as accurate or more accurate than using it to determine how much acid to use in a different method since you are adding the DIY uncertainty/error to the other kit uncertainty/error.
Any updates on this? It would be awesome to have the details in case they don't continue making the reagent.
Hmm interesting. 0.7 seems like a pretty decent swing. Did you measure by weight or volume for total water?I played around with making my own reagent. I made up some fresh reagent with guardian reagent and measured the ph of the solution. I then measured out 1500g of water and added muratic acid till I got the same ph. I used 31.5% acid that I got from the paint department at lowes. It ended up using 5.5ml of acid. It took about 4 tests to run my original reagent out and start using the diy reagent. It tested at .7dkh lower then the oem stuff. I will let it run for a couple of days and adjust the calibration to match my salifert and hanna checker. If it works out this should save about $17 a month.
Jeff
I feel that would throw the accuracy of the test off given it is programmed to a specific acidity of titrant. My brain is working on half cylinders at the moment so sleep and then coffee might help me make more sense of this. Maybe not though!weight for the water. In the settings you are able to increase or decrease what the guardian reads. so you can change the basic readings to match your test kits and it should read properly after that. should be able to readjust it like that for each batch.
Jeff