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Unread 08/01/2016, 03:26 AM   #1
enb141
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Can I add Alkalinity/Calcium powder directly to the tank?

Hi, I just bought some Alkalinity and Calcium powder to increase the Alkalinity and Calcium to my tank to desired levels, so the instructions says first to wait at least 30 minutes to dose a different powder and also says the powder must be mixed in freshwater before adding it.

So my question is do they call freshwater RODI water or tap water?

What happens if I add the powder directly to my tank?


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Unread 08/01/2016, 03:58 AM   #2
bundybear1981
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The freshwater they refer to is RODI water, you mix it well so it can be dose/dripped over a period to prevent a spike. You want any changes in water parameters to be done slowly to avoid shocking/stressing the life in the tank.

Waiting the 30 mins between additives allows it to stabilise before making other changes.

If you add it directly to the tank it could cause a spike and might not dissolve as well. ALWAYS follow the instructions on the product and NEVER dose what you don't test for.


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Unread 08/01/2016, 12:24 PM   #3
enb141
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bundybear1981 View Post
The freshwater they refer to is RODI water, you mix it well so it can be dose/dripped over a period to prevent a spike. You want any changes in water parameters to be done slowly to avoid shocking/stressing the life in the tank.

Waiting the 30 mins between additives allows it to stabilise before making other changes.

If you add it directly to the tank it could cause a spike and might not dissolve as well. ALWAYS follow the instructions on the product and NEVER dose what you don't test for.
Thanks for the advice, I'm currently dosing directly in the part were there's a lot of water movement, to be precise a part in the back of the sump that the skimmer is absorbing water that comes from the main tank, I've done this for a couple weeks adding tiny parts a few times a day to rise gradually the Alkalinity of my tank.

I'll test with RODI water to see if I achieve better results and thanks again.


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Unread 08/01/2016, 02:25 PM   #4
bertoni
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You can dose them dry. Products like Tropic Marin Bio Calcium are designed to dose that way. As long as the particles dissolve well and don't land on animals, the process works well enough.


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Unread 08/02/2016, 06:44 PM   #5
louscal
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when I dose I turn my powerheads on and does in the middle of the turbulence and seems to disperse pretty quickly.


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Unread 08/03/2016, 04:03 AM   #6
enb141
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Guys after doing some tests I found that alkalinity seems to be fine to be added directly to a high water flow, but calcium seems to produce white dots (like ich) on the glass if added directly to the tank so my suggestion is mix with at least 1/4 cup of water (can be tap or purified water) and that's the best method for calcium, alkalinity doesn't seems to have this issue.

I hope this helps some other guys too.


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Unread 08/03/2016, 03:47 PM   #7
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Hmm, that's interesting. I suspect you're seeing some precipitation. That might be due to the volume of the dosing area. Since you're dosing into a sump, that's a distinct possibility.


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Unread 09/12/2016, 03:18 AM   #8
enb141
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Probably but after a few months of dosing alkalinity and calcium I've found that even mixing on a cup of water it always will add tiny dots everywhere in the glass, they are easily removable but still they appear.


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Unread 09/12/2016, 01:24 PM   #9
tmz
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Never dosed it dry, personally. Mixed with some ro/di and dosed to a high flow/volume area,with some time between the calcium and alk part is my preference. I suppose it could work dry in a high volume/hihg flow area but never tried it.

Don't know what the dots are ; I've never seen that reaction.


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Unread 09/12/2016, 03:19 PM   #10
enb141
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Never dosed it dry, personally. Mixed with some ro/di and dosed to a high flow/volume area,with some time between the calcium and alk part is my preference. I suppose it could work dry in a high volume/hihg flow area but never tried it.

Don't know what the dots are ; I've never seen that reaction.
For the last month or so I'm mixing it with a cup of RO/DI water in a high flow volume (The in/out area of the skimmer) but still I got some small dots over the tank.


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Unread 09/12/2016, 05:19 PM   #11
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I'm not sure what the dots are. Are they on the surfaces of the tank itself? A bit of precipitation is reasonably normal.


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Unread 09/20/2016, 10:26 PM   #12
enb141
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Yes here is the picture of the dots in the glass, they are all around the glass


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File Type: jpg 20160913_140921.jpg (30.2 KB, 48 views)
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Unread 09/21/2016, 06:58 AM   #13
pscott99
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Looks more like natural coralline growth due to the extra ca. How old is the tank ? Do you have coralline on the back glass.


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Unread 09/21/2016, 02:05 PM   #14
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The tank is about 13 months old and yes I have coraline in the whole tank, all plastics pieces are covered by coraline algae and also live rock, the glass is not covered my coraline.


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Unread 09/21/2016, 05:33 PM   #15
bertoni
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Those dots look more like some sort of organisms growing than precipitation, in my opinion. I wouldn't worry about them.


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Unread 09/21/2016, 07:09 PM   #16
enb141
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They don't move and they look like coraline algae and only appear when I add calcium on my tank.


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Unread 09/21/2016, 08:02 PM   #17
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Do they disappear on their own?


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Unread 09/21/2016, 08:25 PM   #18
enb141
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Nope, they never disappear unless I remove them with any magnet glass cleaner, by the way they are very easy to remove not as hard as algae or coraline.


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Unread 09/21/2016, 10:17 PM   #19
cubbyman60
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I would not dose directly into the tank, even though it's probably okay most of the time.

I recently dosed alkalinity (mixed in RO) directly into the tank and saw and immediate adverse reaction.

Now, I always dose into a high flow area in the sump.


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Unread 09/21/2016, 11:28 PM   #20
enb141
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cubbyman60 View Post
I would not dose directly into the tank, even though it's probably okay most of the time.

I recently dosed alkalinity (mixed in RO) directly into the tank and saw and immediate adverse reaction.

Now, I always dose into a high flow area in the sump.
Yep that's what I've been doing all the time, first mix with RODI then dose it to a high current flow.


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Unread 09/22/2016, 05:54 PM   #21
bertoni
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Well, I have to agree that dosing directly might be part of the cause of the dots. If you're worried, dissolving the supplements before dosing might help. They might be something other than calcium carbonate, but my first guess would be precipitation.


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Unread 09/22/2016, 10:40 PM   #22
enb141
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This are the "dusts" I'm using

http://www.seachem.com/reef-adv-calcium.php

http://www.seachem.com/reef-builder.php

I dose with a cup or RO/DI water mixing it if I were doing a tea cup (shaking it for about 3 minutes).

The dots never disappear by their own, I have to manually remove them.


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Unread 09/23/2016, 11:14 AM   #23
tmz
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The ingredients for those look pretty standard. I assume you mix them separately. Perhaps a bit more dilution would help.

The dots ,in form, look a lot like the dots of coraline I get on glass; but, coraline is a rhodophyta species which usually has some tint of red or pink. It's possible, I suppose that the lighting is washing out the color on newly forming coraline . When pink dots form in my aquarium they are much easier to remove when new and thin than more mature coraline patches .
It could be some abiotic precipitation but abiotic precipitation of calcium carbonate would likely also show up in other areas , like pumps and heaters if it is occurring.


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Last edited by tmz; 09/23/2016 at 11:23 AM.
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Unread 09/23/2016, 12:30 PM   #24
enb141
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Yes I mix them separately with about 6 hours of difference between each one.

I'm gonna take another picture of coraline algae growing on the glass and those dot's doesn't look like coraline at all, they look more like planaria in size but totally rounded or in oval like form.


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Unread 09/23/2016, 03:31 PM   #25
enb141
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Here is the image in high resolution comparing coraline with this dots







Last edited by enb141; 09/23/2016 at 03:37 PM.
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