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lake salt or buffer?


gianniz

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well i was using sechem cichlid lake salt and i thought that was it. then i went to my lfs and they told me if i wanted the salt or the buffer!

i think salt provides all the minerals etc that replicates tangs/malawi etc and buffer helps to keep the ph high thats about all. is this true?

if so can i just use the lake salt and buy the cheaper baking soda stuff?

thanks

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Mark,

You can use sodium bi-carb but it has a short buffering effect in the tank. What I do is actually make up a bit of mix half epsom salts and half seachem salts for the salts and half seachem malawi buffer and half bi-carb. Mainly because it it greatly reduces the overall cost of treating 26 tanks. 25kgs of epsom salts cost me $20 and 12 kg of bi-carb cost me $12. I am also considering adding a kH generator but I am not sure what amounts to use yet. Laurie (ChorryLan) uses it and reckons it is the goods.

cheers

rosco

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Make sure you use KH buffer. Low or zero KH in the water = pH crashes = dead fish.

Sydney tap water has ZERO KH. Us with Africans MUST have a high KH, not only to match what they have in the wild but also to prevent pH crashes.

I use Seachem salts and Aquasonic KH Generator on my tanks in the house.

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I am also considering adding a kH generator but I am not sure what amounts to use yet. Laurie (ChorryLan) uses it and reckons it is the goods.

Is that just another name for a calcium reactor as used on reef tanks? ie: use CO2 to drop the pH in a chamber to disolve calcium carbonate with an electronic do-hickey controlling CO2 on/off valve while monitoring the level in the tank.

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I am also considering adding a kH generator but I am not sure what amounts to use yet. Laurie (ChorryLan) uses it and reckons it is the goods.

Is that just another name for a calcium reactor as used on reef tanks? ie: use CO2 to drop the pH in a chamber to disolve calcium carbonate with an electronic do-hickey controlling CO2 on/off valve while monitoring the level in the tank.

No it is not. It is a white powder, much like bicarbonate, but more effective.

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