First I want to say I am not chasing Orp, just curious what makes it drop from 450 to 350 after a 15 gallon water change with red sea blue bucket. Tank is 150 gallons.
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That's consistent, i get 100 mV change with 10%, you get 50 mV with 5% both with red sea, me blue bucket you black bucket.Each salt has a different effect on ORP. The salt I currently prefer, Red Sea Coral Pro (black bucket), also causes the largest drop in ORP with my typical 5% water change, as much as 50-60 mV. Other salts I've used, Reef Crystals and RPM, had a lesser effect, although all 3 decrease ORP acutely to some degree. I assume it's due to certain ions being present in reduced state in freshly mixed salt, but I'm not sure which (iron? manganese?)
I was curious about this myself. I'm a chemist by education and profession and figured it (obviously) had something to do with the salt mix. I'm seeing a roughly 10% drop in ORP when performing a water change. All other measurables don't vary significantly.I'm going to have to run an experiment to see if mixing longer has any effect on minimizing this. At the end of the day we all want stability in general and for those acros in particular. I'm a believer in water changes for many reasons, but this is certianly an argument, and a good one, for minimizing or eliminating them.
You make a good point. That said, I'm going to mix salt for 48 hours for next week's 10% water change and see if the shift in ORP changes.I would not presume mixing longer to raise ORP is necessarily a good thing, if what happens is oxidation of ferrous iron to less soluble ferric iron, etc. You may just be precipitating out certain trace elements.
You make a good point. That said, I'm going to mix salt for 48 hours for next week's 10% water change and see if the shift in ORP changes.
Or maybe I don't need to worry about it. I was fine until I started looking at data!