I don't believe your PH can crash so to speak. If it rapidly drops over a short period of time, im thinking one of two things happend: 1) you chemically altered your water either with store bought chemicals, driftwood, peat, etc., 2) you did a massive water change with water of a ph much less than your original water.
I'm assuming most of the PH problems here are caused by bad water quality. Most new fishkeepers don't realize how crucial frequent water changes are. If you go too long without water changes, your water quality deteriorates, your alkalinity drops which in turn allows your PH to steadily drop. In low PH, ammonia becomes much more toxic. Then when they finally do do a (most likely large) water change, theres a drastic swing in the water chemistry.
I don't believe your PH can crash so to speak. If it rapidly drops over a short period of time, im thinking one of two things happend: 1) you chemically altered your water either with store bought chemicals, driftwood, peat, etc., 2) you did a massive water change with water of a ph much less than your original water.
I'm assuming most of the PH problems here are caused by bad water quality. Most new fishkeepers don't realize how crucial frequent water changes are. If you go too long without water changes, your water quality deteriorates, your alkalinity drops which in turn allows your PH to steadily drop. In low PH, ammonia becomes much more toxic. Then when they finally do do a (most likely large) water change, theres a drastic swing in the water chemistry.
Actually ammonia in low pH is less toxic.