I've been breaking in a new canister, running it together with a HOB until it had a chance to establish bacterial colonies. Yesterday I removed the HOB and overnight the pH went from ~6.9 to 6.4. My KH is 70ppm, and Chuck's CO2 calculator puts my current CO2 at 48ppm 
The fish seemed fine this morning, and I left everything as is during the day - I figured the pH would go up to ~6.6 and I'd remove a 2L DIY bottle this evening to keep it there overnight. Well, I got home and the pH is still 6.4 (it could even be 6.2, they're almost exactly alike on the test kit chart, so it's very difficult to tell). The fish still seem fine (no gasping), and I'm a bit reluctant to cause another swing in pH by removing too much CO2.
Should I leave things as they are, remove a bottle, put an air pump on a timer to run overnights... thoughts?
[edit] Yesterday I did weekly maintainance and did some pretty serious pruning - right now about 1/2 the floor of the tank is planted, 1/2 is bare. There is a huge water sprite (12" wide x 24" high) and a very large tangle of hygrophila polysperma (18" wide x 18" high, 8" deep) in addition to a bunch of smaller stuff, so there's still a lot of plants, but not as much mass as there was. Thought that might be important, since there won't be as much oxygen production going on [/edit]
[edit #2] Okay... I've been doing some checking online, and found some interesting information that seems to indicate that this shouldn't harm the fish (the first thing I found was at http://www.thekrib.com/Plants/CO2/co2-level.html). I have read several places that some fish can tolerate levels up to 800ppm! Unbelievable! I do think I'll remove a bottle tomorrow, but I'm leaving it for now since I don't like making too many changes in a short time unless I have to [/edit #2]
The fish seemed fine this morning, and I left everything as is during the day - I figured the pH would go up to ~6.6 and I'd remove a 2L DIY bottle this evening to keep it there overnight. Well, I got home and the pH is still 6.4 (it could even be 6.2, they're almost exactly alike on the test kit chart, so it's very difficult to tell). The fish still seem fine (no gasping), and I'm a bit reluctant to cause another swing in pH by removing too much CO2.
Should I leave things as they are, remove a bottle, put an air pump on a timer to run overnights... thoughts?
[edit] Yesterday I did weekly maintainance and did some pretty serious pruning - right now about 1/2 the floor of the tank is planted, 1/2 is bare. There is a huge water sprite (12" wide x 24" high) and a very large tangle of hygrophila polysperma (18" wide x 18" high, 8" deep) in addition to a bunch of smaller stuff, so there's still a lot of plants, but not as much mass as there was. Thought that might be important, since there won't be as much oxygen production going on [/edit]
[edit #2] Okay... I've been doing some checking online, and found some interesting information that seems to indicate that this shouldn't harm the fish (the first thing I found was at http://www.thekrib.com/Plants/CO2/co2-level.html). I have read several places that some fish can tolerate levels up to 800ppm! Unbelievable! I do think I'll remove a bottle tomorrow, but I'm leaving it for now since I don't like making too many changes in a short time unless I have to [/edit #2]
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