thadius65 said:
So let me see if I get this right....
I am going to remove peat from my tank and over then next 1-2 weeks do my usual or slightly more frequent 30% water changes. At the end of this I should have a closer to tap parms of 3dKH (maybe slightly lower due to driftwood) and a PH of 6.8 or so. I will install my CO2 and utlize the SMS122 PH controller and set for 6.4PH. I will set my buble counter to 3bps. Sound good so far?
I don't understand why I would shut of CO2 at night when I have a PH controller. Set at 6.4 it will shut off when it gets there, so night time/lights out it will most likely shut off anyways, but maintain a more constant PH/CO2 lever, correct?
Thanks!
Ted
Sounds good Ted:
Make sure you have calibrated your probe properly. Nothing replaces good old observation. I don't put 100% trust in the instruments, they are merely there to help us. I had a pH probe go bad while I was on vacation, so bad things can happen when all of our eggs are in that basket.
by observation I mean the following:
Are my plants outgassing O2 regularly...are they growing...are they stunted...are there any algal blooms...
Are my fish hanging out at the top. Do they apprear stressed or happy? Are they spawning?
Each thing adds up to your whole picture.
You do not need to shut off your CO2 at night....it isn't necessary. That said, You need to have good water movement for O2 dissolution. The key to getting where you need to be with this is to take the least path of resistance, observe and determine what is best for you. You may wake up and find all of the fish at the top "gasping" That is a sign of too much CO2 and not enough O2 in the form of water movement or plant O2 outgassing <pearling>. One remedy is to run an airstone at night. Personally, I kill two birds with one stone. I just turn off the pH controller/CO2 with the lights. This way my CO2 gas lasts twice as long. There is no need to maintain a 6.4 pH overnight. Your fish don't care, and your plants will not utilize the CO2 when the lights are off, so you are just gassing for no reason IMO. If you shut it off at night, your pH will likely inch up to about 6.7 and in the morning, when the lights go back on and your CO2 resumes, it will right it at a measured pace. You never have to wake up to fish at the surface.
remember, CO2 runs, your pH is 6.4 your lights are on, you dose ferts, your plants grow, that said, at night, CO2 on, pH 6.4 but no lights, so the plants will not outgas O2, so available O2 for your fish is not as plentiful as it is during lights on. This is why many either turn it off at night, or leave it on the controller, but have an airstone run when lights are off.
You will find out what works best for you. I still don't know your fert schedule or filtration. This helps determine a lot as well. Hope this helps.