so no harmful effects? i dont need to add like crushed coral or anything? my ph is at 6.4 so i doubt i have a good water buffer. in all the articles i've read, it says that you need a fairly hard water so that it can resist the pH change that might occur when dosing co2, are they wrong?
Yep.
It would help if they actually tested the advice they offer............:idea:
You can have lower pH's and still have a significant KH BTW..........
But pH in and of itself will not do any harm if solely due to CO2.
Absent KH will make the measure of the tank's KH and the pH impossible to determine what the CO2ppms are.
But the fish are not bothered by pH change due to variation in the CO2 near as anyone can tell and certainly no one has ever shown that after decades of water changes..............
Simple test, anyone can do it, then you question things, just because it's written does not in anyway imply it's correct.
I think why many started carrying on about this dogma/myth was due to adding too much CO2 or raising the pH or dropping it due to other things not related to CO2 gas injection.
There is no such things as a "pH crash", often spoken of....... yet never tested by those suggesting.......
If you add too much CO2, that will gas the fish but that's got nothing to do with pH. It has to do with too much CO2 so the fish gills cannot exchange CO2/O2, you cannot breath as well in high CO2 either, but if we added more O2 and only added CO2 when the plants took a lot of it up at the same time and added more O2, then it is not as bad.
I just think so many folks from other areas of the fish hobby decided to take some of that advice and broadly apply it to everything and all cases, you cannot do that.
You need to test it and see otherwise you do not know.
Regards,
Tom Barr
Regards,
Tom Barr