vodka increases dKH (?)

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Does dosing vodka increase the dKH on an alkalinity test?

Shouldn't. @Randy Holmes-Farley would vodka/ ethanol have this effect?

I've carbon dosed off and on for years with vodka and never noticed a rise in alkalinity.
 
Weird.... I went from 9.4 to 13.2 in 2 weeks and didn't dose anything but 80 proof vodka

Maybe my sailfert test is out of whack.

I need to look around to see if a have a test liquid that has a known dKH
 
Deff interesting...
I've been dosing nopox for about a year.. then transitioned over to just vodka..
Never has my alk go up or down... till recently when all my Lps really started growing..
 
Weird.... I went from 9.4 to 13.2 in 2 weeks and didn't dose anything but 80 proof vodka

Maybe my sailfert test is out of whack.

I need to look around to see if a have a test liquid that has a known dKH

You can test your salifert test kit by using 1.135 grams of baking soda in 1 gallon of 0tds ro/di or distilled water. Result should be 10dkh.
 
If I buy a scale that can measure 1.135 grams my wife will think I'm selling heroin. lol!

Lol mine was 30 dollars. If you dont want to buy one a pharmacist at the store will weigh it for you. They are usually happy to.
 
Does dosing vodka increase the dKH on an alkalinity test?

Vodka dosing to a reef tank will have no direct effect on alkalinity.
 
If nitrate is dropping fast, that can add alkalinity.

From an article of mine:

When nitrate proceeds further along the nitrogen cycle, depleted alkalinity is returned in exactly the amount lost. For example, if the nitrate is allowed to be converted into N2 in a sand bed, one of the products is bicarbonate, as shown in equation 2 (below) for the breakdown of glucose and nitrate under typical anoxic conditions as might happen in a deep sand bed:


  1. (2) 4NO3- + 5/6 C6H12O6 (glucose) + 4H2O --> 2 N2 + 7H2O + 4HCO3- + CO2
In equation 2 we see that exactly one bicarbonate ion is produced for each nitrate ion consumed. Consequently, the alkalinity gain is 0.8 meq/L (2.3 dKH) for every 50 ppm of nitrate consumed.

Likewise, equation 3 (below) shows the uptake of nitrate and CO2 into macroalgae to form typical organic molecules:


  1. (3) 122 CO2 + 122 H2O + 16 NO3- --> C106H260O106N16 + 138 O2 + 16 HCO3-
Again, one bicarbonate ion is produced for each nitrate ion consumed.
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

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