I don’t monitor CO2 either. I supposed I’m living in the edge.False, more or less. If everything always goes as planned, and you really "know" that your alk *and* ambient CO2 are stable (how are you monitoring those?), then you don't need to pay attention to pH. But, pH can provide a lot of additional information about the health of the tank, and in particular, can be a very useful "early warning system" if something, somehow, does go wrong.
Pretty interesting, I have never thought about PH and have never really tested it on a regular basis. I have always made the mistake of testing PH manually at my testing testing which is in the garage with the door wide open. This obviously gave me false readings as I always tested about 8.2.
Now that I have an Apex, after calibrating the PH probe, the numbers are 7.8x lights on, and 7.6x lights off. If I remember correctly - below 7.6 and above 8.6 is the danger zone. Now I am trying to raise my PH, as I do agree with others that having a good PH (8.2-8.4?) will help with coral growth.
I setup a temporary line from my skimmer silencer and will see what the results look like tomorrow. I am thinking about outside line, co2 scrubber, or possibly both.
I agree with this.having a sps dominate tank, pH is the only thing I chase. to me, it goes hand and hand with alk.
You definitely fall into the experienced sps reefer and looking for fast growth! Lolhaving a sps dominate tank, pH is the only thing I chase. to me, it goes hand and hand with alk.
Here is where I think PH plays an even bigger role. By reducing the energy it takes for the coral to deposit Skelton and rid themselves of the extra hydrogen you reduce stress. Less stress, the more it can live thru the things we don’t see, or can’t control. PH in my experience has resulted in stronger PE, quicker healing, and denser skeleton.From what I've been currently researching, high ph along with high alk, good lighting and high flow can push fast growth in coral. I'll be testing this soon once I setup my new frag tank thanks to @Srt4eric.
If not trying to push coral growth and all other parameters are fine I don't think ph is something you need to worry about. If for some reason you can't keep the other parameters stable or in check then I think ph testing could help diagnosing a potential issue on your reef setup.
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I run my PH outside that zone. I use kalkwasser, so I wouldn’t recommend running that high using 2-part.
I think higher PH has a lot of positive benefits for me.
No fish in the Frag system, co2 scrubber, and about 2 gallons of kalkwasser a day in a 100 gallon Frag system.What is your setup that your max is 8.75?
Did you test what increase the co2 scrubber added? I am testing what would increase PH more 1) running a line outside 20ft or 2) co2 scrubber.No fish in the Frag system, co2 scrubber, and about 2 gallons of kalkwasser a day in a 100 gallon Frag system.
With fish it will run lower, hard to say by how much.
When I did 2 part and CO2 scrubber on my reef250, the co2 scrubber brought ph from 7.92-8.17 to 8.1 to 8.3ish.Did you test what increase the co2 scrubber added? I am testing what would increase PH more 1) running a line outside 20ft or 2) co2 scrubber.
If I can avoid making holes in the wall, that would be a better solution.