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Unread 10/15/2012, 10:25 AM   #1
Maine_fisher
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Cloudy New Salt Water

Hi All:

I mixed up a batch of Red Sea Pro for water changes for my three tanks and the water never cleared up and I am wondering why. Here is what I did:

1. Added 10 gallons of RO/DI water from my relatively new BRS RO/DI to my 20 gallon Brute trash can that had a couple of quarts of 1.026 residual salt water in it from the last mixing two weeks ago.

2. Heated the water to 78 F with a tank heater.

3. Added the correct amount of water and mixed it up. Salinity is 1.026.

Since then the water has remained cloudy and that was about 20 hours ago. It looks like some of the salt hasn't dissolved. I don't understand what I did wrong. I've used this batch of salt several times before without issue.

I did decided to increase the temp to 82 F and the water has started to clear, but it is by no means clear yet. I also added a small pump to slowly circulate the water. Should I dump this water out and start again?

I would like to know opinions on what is going on and what I should do.

Thanks in advance,

Rick



Last edited by Maine_fisher; 10/15/2012 at 10:38 AM.
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Unread 10/15/2012, 11:43 AM   #2
bigfish14
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Did you have any form of circulation in the trash can before you added the small pump? Circulation is needed to mix the salt and dissolve it.


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Unread 10/15/2012, 12:11 PM   #3
DNA
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I've heard that the correct temperature of 77°F (25°C) is important with this salt.
My first two mixes turned out clear but the third one had visibility less than a feet after 24 hours of mixing.
I used it anyway with no apparent ill effect.


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Unread 10/15/2012, 12:23 PM   #4
C4rN4gE
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Out of curiosity, why slowly circulate the water? As long as its not splashing out, I would vigorously mix it up. This would also help oxygenate the water.


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Unread 10/15/2012, 03:46 PM   #5
disc1
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Cooler water will dissolve the calcium and alkalinity mixtures better. That is the cloudiness you're seeing. It's better to mix cold and then heat. Just backwards of what you would think because calcium carbonate has retrograde solubility.


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Unread 10/15/2012, 04:47 PM   #6
Maine_fisher
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Thanks...good discussion. To answer a question...i only slowly circulated the water because the pump i had available was a very low flow.

Sounds like what some are saying is that i should add my salt then warm the water? Anyone have issues with this?

Thanks,

rick


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Unread 10/15/2012, 05:28 PM   #7
bertoni
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I always mixed my salt into cold water. It works well. You might be seeing some problems from the high temperature, or the issue might have been adding the salt too quickly, or with not quite enough flow to mix it rapidly enough.


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