This is a typical Alk dosing regimen for me. I have it broken down in 4 groups, with the timing corresponding to when my Trident reads 4 times a day. If the Alk readings are coming in consistently low or high at a certain time of day, I raise or decrease (respectively) the dosing for the 6 hours preceding that Trident sampling time.
View attachment 26904
So for example if my 18:00 Trident readings are coming in consistently low I’ll slightly raise my 12:01-18:00 dosing amount.
The exact numbers aren’t important, and I’m tweaking them frequently anyway as my tank needs more or less dosing. The trend is consistent though. To keep it easy I increase or decrease my Ca and Mg solutions (I’m using Triton) by 5 ml/day at a time, then add/subtract 5 ml to 2 different time points (Triton doses twice as much Alk as the other 2).
1 thing I was surprised about by taking this approach-
Clearly Alk consumption correlates with photoperiod as we all expect, but there is considerable Alk consumption happening for hours after the photoperiod. This makes sense from a biological perspective if you think of photosynthesis as the fuel that allows growth, and it takes several hours for the coral to run out of the fuel they’ve accumulated that day. Even the 12a-6a period needs some small amount of dosing or else the Alk level drops significantly.
This approach also makes apparent something that I disagree with that is commonly done. Lots of people set up a baseline dosing level, and then let their Apex dose a little more or less based on the last Trident reading. If you do this, you will always be in catch-up mode, dosing more AFTER you dosed too little and the Alk dropped, then dosing less AFTER you dose too much and the Alk is too high.
The ca I started dosing was precipitating and becoming a solid chunk. That, however could be because of my dosing tube setup which I’ve also fixed.So your dose stayed the same but you changed the timing so part 1 doses during the day and part 2 doses at night?
What made you make that switch?
I would love to see your alk chart. Your ratios are almost exact to mine.This is a typical Alk dosing regimen for me. I have it broken down in 4 groups, with the timing corresponding to when my Trident reads 4 times a day. If the Alk readings are coming in consistently low or high at a certain time of day, I raise or decrease (respectively) the dosing for the 6 hours preceding that Trident sampling time.
View attachment 26904
So for example if my 18:00 Trident readings are coming in consistently low I’ll slightly raise my 12:01-18:00 dosing amount.
The exact numbers aren’t important, and I’m tweaking them frequently anyway as my tank needs more or less dosing. The trend is consistent though. To keep it easy I increase or decrease my Ca and Mg solutions (I’m using Triton) by 5 ml/day at a time, then add/subtract 5 ml to 2 different time points (Triton doses twice as much Alk as the other 2).
1 thing I was surprised about by taking this approach-
Clearly Alk consumption correlates with photoperiod as we all expect, but there is considerable Alk consumption happening for hours after the photoperiod. This makes sense from a biological perspective if you think of photosynthesis as the fuel that allows growth, and it takes several hours for the coral to run out of the fuel they’ve accumulated that day. Even the 12a-6a period needs some small amount of dosing or else the Alk level drops significantly.
This approach also makes apparent something that I disagree with that is commonly done. Lots of people set up a baseline dosing level, and then let their Apex dose a little more or less based on the last Trident reading. If you do this, you will always be in catch-up mode, dosing more AFTER you dosed too little and the Alk dropped, then dosing less AFTER you dose too much and the Alk is too high.
My Alk chart:I would love to see your alk chart. Your ratios are almost exact to mine.
1Pure speculation, but do you get get random .1-.25 dkh drops in the 12-18 window?
2) What does your PH swing look like?
3) what’s your peak photo intensity and timeslot?
I am really interested in what you have to say, apologies for the barrage of questions.
I prefer them to snails. They came in nickel-sized from ORA, but are now 2-3cm and actually I need to move more of them to the garage tank since the coralline is getting scarce on the back glass (good for me, bad for them). You used to be able to get them much cheaper from ORA/live aquaria before everything got expensive in the hobby this past year.Damn, 12 urchins?!?