sjimmyh
Member
Did my water change today. Water changing more than normal as I am trying to lower my disolved organic level from my uncured live rock that I talked about in a recent post.
Anyhoo, Thought I might pass on some stuff about instant ocean. I am currently using up a bucket of the stuff I have left over from tank set up before I bought some thats a bit better for a reef system.
5 Gallon bucket mixed to 1.026 SG at ~79 degrees.
Alkalinity 10 dKH
Calcium 340 ppm
Magnesium ~900 ppm
To treat this 5 gallon bucket with Kent Turbo Calcium and SeaChem Magnesium (which I bought prior to finding out this is pretty easy to DIY) to get decent levels, I had to:
One teaspoon of SeaChem Mg will raise that 5 gallon bucket by ~20 ppm. So, I added 15 teaspoons (wow, lots, huh?). End result was about 1400 ppm.
One teaspoon of Kent Turbo Calcium will raise a 5 gallon bucket by ~100ppm.
I added two teaspoons to test it and came up with 540 ppm. The next bucket of new salt water, I added no Calcium to make up for it.
Alkalinity was pretty good as is. I left this alone.
I didn't bother with anything else since there are too many variables associated with pH to say my new salt water would have the same pH as you would if you made the same amount of water with the exact same bucket of instant ocean salt. Iodide/Iodine, strontium, etc. weren't really my concern since most people deal with these under there own liking.
The big reason was to let people know how much calcium and Magnesium from large name brand products was required to raise levels in your new water since some of these products do not give approximate level increases per measure of dose to measure of water. I know Kent Turbo Calcium has come up a few times.
Anyhoo, Thought I might pass on some stuff about instant ocean. I am currently using up a bucket of the stuff I have left over from tank set up before I bought some thats a bit better for a reef system.
5 Gallon bucket mixed to 1.026 SG at ~79 degrees.
Alkalinity 10 dKH
Calcium 340 ppm
Magnesium ~900 ppm
To treat this 5 gallon bucket with Kent Turbo Calcium and SeaChem Magnesium (which I bought prior to finding out this is pretty easy to DIY) to get decent levels, I had to:
One teaspoon of SeaChem Mg will raise that 5 gallon bucket by ~20 ppm. So, I added 15 teaspoons (wow, lots, huh?). End result was about 1400 ppm.
One teaspoon of Kent Turbo Calcium will raise a 5 gallon bucket by ~100ppm.
I added two teaspoons to test it and came up with 540 ppm. The next bucket of new salt water, I added no Calcium to make up for it.
Alkalinity was pretty good as is. I left this alone.
I didn't bother with anything else since there are too many variables associated with pH to say my new salt water would have the same pH as you would if you made the same amount of water with the exact same bucket of instant ocean salt. Iodide/Iodine, strontium, etc. weren't really my concern since most people deal with these under there own liking.
The big reason was to let people know how much calcium and Magnesium from large name brand products was required to raise levels in your new water since some of these products do not give approximate level increases per measure of dose to measure of water. I know Kent Turbo Calcium has come up a few times.