exactly more kalk = less money to FM, this is a fact.It’s cheap….compared to magic powders and potions
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exactly more kalk = less money to FM, this is a fact.It’s cheap….compared to magic powders and potions
I think they have that covered:exactly more kalk = less money to FM, this is a fact.
I think they have that covered:
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Next BOLUS for Kalk…
I downloaded a transcript of the interview and just cleaned up some duplicate words and added a bit of punctuation for readability. It is otherwise verbatim. He talked earlier in the interview about how the precipitates formed by Kalkwasser feed the biofilm on the rocks and surfaces, and the biofilm interferes with the crystallized sodium bicarbonate on the rock surfaces. Which is why Kalkwasser can't be used with Bolus (even though I and many other reefers use Kalk and 3 part every day). Looking foward to hearing your thoughts!It does seem like he may be confusing AFR and bolus dosing of bicarbonate.
I started watching this episode because I usually enjoy listening to the show, but I had to turn it off because it was so stupid.I downloaded a transcript of the interview and just cleaned up some duplicate words and added a bit of punctuation for readability. It is otherwise verbatim. He talked earlier in the interview about how the precipitates formed by Kalkwasser feed the biofilm on the rocks and surfaces, and the biofilm interferes with the crystallized sodium bicarbonate on the rock surfaces. Which is why Kalkwasser can't be used with Bolus (even though I and many other reefers use Kalk and 3 part every day). Looking foward to hearing your thoughts!
"So the clue is there right in the science um now the big reveal is really our understanding of how bolus works. How do we get from a single big dose let's say of 2 DKH but it only adds 0.4DKH or less sometimes and it creates this flat alkalinity. How is that possible? And it took us a long time to to to find out. The answer lies in a very special property of sodium bicarbonate. When you add it to seawater, even though it's a liquid it doesn't dissolve, it stays in a form in the water and it's called a dense layer precursor phase, okay a DLP. And this science is so new um is you know the papers were really only written about this this year. But actually inadvertently we were doing this 30 years ago and we were creating these amazingly stable systems by putting scoops of bicarb into the system not knowing at all what was happening with the chemistry. Yeah but now because we've got all these tools we can see the effect of what it does. So the bicarbonate what it does is it creates like a micro Crystal. You can't see it, but it's adhering to a surface and that surface has to be relatively clear of that bacteria that we were talking about, that biofilm. And what it does is, as the alkalinity is used, it cools (sic?) off on those crystals. Okay, and there's a very special piece of chemistry which is um it was known as a kinetic constraint of um of carbon dioxide. So basically, the car (audio lags momentarily) this chemistry but effectively it means that it takes these crystals, it takes from these little bicarbonate crystals in preference to bringing in carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. And that's why the pH is maintained with the bolus system. That's why we have nearly 3,000 people enjoying good pH in the tanks that they've never had before. Okay, so there's no way you can say it doesn't work uh because we've got the proof in the users. But this is what they're experiencing when you dose the alkalinity it's creating this dense uh this dense liquid precursor phase onto the surfaces and it calls off on that over the day. And I don't think we've ever explained that before um but this is the magic of how it works." -Doug Dorrat on "Rappin with ReefBum" 10/29/24
Similar to the magic layer of bicarbonate micro crystalsI personally think these guys just keep building layer upon layer of utter BS by purposeful mischaracterization of tangentially relevant scientific concepts and people suck it up because they don’t have the tools to refute it.
Yes, I have a professional biological background and I am not a chemist.
Thank you for sharing, I had to look up DLP and kinetic constraint of carbon dioxide. I used chatGPT so here it is:I downloaded a transcript of the interview and just cleaned up some duplicate words and added a bit of punctuation for readability. It is otherwise verbatim. He talked earlier in the interview about how the precipitates formed by Kalkwasser feed the biofilm on the rocks and surfaces, and the biofilm interferes with the crystallized sodium bicarbonate on the rock surfaces. Which is why Kalkwasser can't be used with Bolus (even though I and many other reefers use Kalk and 3 part every day). Looking foward to hearing your thoughts!
"So the clue is there right in the science um now the big reveal is really our understanding of how bolus works. How do we get from a single big dose let's say of 2 DKH but it only adds 0.4DKH or less sometimes and it creates this flat alkalinity. How is that possible? And it took us a long time to to to find out. The answer lies in a very special property of sodium bicarbonate. When you add it to seawater, even though it's a liquid it doesn't dissolve, it stays in a form in the water and it's called a dense layer precursor phase, okay a DLP. And this science is so new um is you know the papers were really only written about this this year. But actually inadvertently we were doing this 30 years ago and we were creating these amazingly stable systems by putting scoops of bicarb into the system not knowing at all what was happening with the chemistry. Yeah but now because we've got all these tools we can see the effect of what it does. So the bicarbonate what it does is it creates like a micro Crystal. You can't see it, but it's adhering to a surface and that surface has to be relatively clear of that bacteria that we were talking about, that biofilm. And what it does is, as the alkalinity is used, it cools (sic?) off on those crystals. Okay, and there's a very special piece of chemistry which is um it was known as a kinetic constraint of um of carbon dioxide. So basically, the car (audio lags momentarily) this chemistry but effectively it means that it takes these crystals, it takes from these little bicarbonate crystals in preference to bringing in carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. And that's why the pH is maintained with the bolus system. That's why we have nearly 3,000 people enjoying good pH in the tanks that they've never had before. Okay, so there's no way you can say it doesn't work uh because we've got the proof in the users. But this is what they're experiencing when you dose the alkalinity it's creating this dense uh this dense liquid precursor phase onto the surfaces and it calls off on that over the day. And I don't think we've ever explained that before um but this is the magic of how it works." -Doug Dorrat on "Rappin with ReefBum" 10/29/24
I downloaded a transcript of the interview and just cleaned up some duplicate words and added a bit of punctuation for readability. It is otherwise verbatim. He talked earlier in the interview about how the precipitates formed by Kalkwasser feed the biofilm on the rocks and surfaces, and the biofilm interferes with the crystallized sodium bicarbonate on the rock surfaces. Which is why Kalkwasser can't be used with Bolus (even though I and many other reefers use Kalk and 3 part every day). Looking foward to hearing your thoughts!
"So the clue is there right in the science um now the big reveal is really our understanding of how bolus works. How do we get from a single big dose let's say of 2 DKH but it only adds 0.4DKH or less sometimes and it creates this flat alkalinity. How is that possible? And it took us a long time to to to find out. The answer lies in a very special property of sodium bicarbonate. When you add it to seawater, even though it's a liquid it doesn't dissolve, it stays in a form in the water and it's called a dense layer precursor phase, okay a DLP. And this science is so new um is you know the papers were really only written about this this year. But actually inadvertently we were doing this 30 years ago and we were creating these amazingly stable systems by putting scoops of bicarb into the system not knowing at all what was happening with the chemistry. Yeah but now because we've got all these tools we can see the effect of what it does. So the bicarbonate what it does is it creates like a micro Crystal. You can't see it, but it's adhering to a surface and that surface has to be relatively clear of that bacteria that we were talking about, that biofilm. And what it does is, as the alkalinity is used, it cools (sic?) off on those crystals. Okay, and there's a very special piece of chemistry which is um it was known as a kinetic constraint of um of carbon dioxide. So basically, the car (audio lags momentarily) this chemistry but effectively it means that it takes these crystals, it takes from these little bicarbonate crystals in preference to bringing in carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. And that's why the pH is maintained with the bolus system. That's why we have nearly 3,000 people enjoying good pH in the tanks that they've never had before. Okay, so there's no way you can say it doesn't work uh because we've got the proof in the users. But this is what they're experiencing when you dose the alkalinity it's creating this dense uh this dense liquid precursor phase onto the surfaces and it calls off on that over the day. And I don't think we've ever explained that before um but this is the magic of how it works." -Doug Dorrat on "Rappin with ReefBum" 10/29/24
Thank you for the layman's explanation. One other question that might have been covered. Doug warns (I have also heard fears circulating in the community) about precipitates redissolving into the aquarium during power outages or equipment failures. Let's say a pH drop during a less than 24 hours event. Is there any truth in this? It seems like precipitates would have a hard time redissolving in a solution that is 7.9 instead of 8.3 for instance, especially in a short term scenario.Thank you very much for transcribing that.
There are a great many problems with that “explanation” and it does not make scientific sense to accept it as a viable theory.
Dense liquid precursor theory is merely a molecular level explanation of what happens in the very earliest stages of precipitation of something. In the absence of any seed crystal surfaces to initiate more precipitation on, a bunch of molecules need to come together rapidly to make a tiny bit of solid. The theory suggests that happens when local random concentrations result in a higher than average concentration over some small area, and in the “dense” area, several molecules come together and form tiny crystals. Those crystals can either grow more or redissolve.
I don’t see how that theory explains any of the ideas posted above.
For chemistry types, here’s a review article in dense liquid precursor ideas:
Doug does go off in part of the interview about how Kalkwasser and Sodium carbonate sequester all of the the CO2 and there is not enough for coral photosynthesis. I have heard Craig Bingman mention this effect of Kalk in his talks on Kalkwasser chemistry, but it seems to be very extreme examples, and not likely to happen in an aerated box of water with animals living in it.Thank you for sharing, I had to look up DLP and kinetic constraint of carbon dioxide. I used chatGPT so here it is:
DLP:
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kinetic constraint of carbon dioxide:
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Not sure if chatGPT is correct but based on what it states I am not understanding the relation of these concepts to BOLUS…
Maybe it is too early in the morning…
Yes, the contradictions were rife. In one sentence the biofilm on the rocks were good and slough off and feed the coral. The next sentence was to have very clean rocks to facilitate their magic crystals. Very little quantifying the important parameters and objectives. It was like "Come to me and let me judge your tank and tell you what to do." I think that is what really rubs me the wrong way about Doug. Demonizing other methods and creating a cult-like mentality instead of having a discussion of the benefits and drawbacks of different approaches.If we take the whole cobbled together mess as factual, doesn't that then mean that the effectiveness of "Bolus Dosing" in context to pH and this "timed release" stability has everything to do with exposed calcified surface area AND flow in any given system? What about algae covered... coralline covered, biofilm covered, etc? Those surfaces would appear to not fall into the magic zone.
I am sorry, but the crap just gets deeper and deeper and you would think at some point too deep... but alas they just invent more science and publish another video the next week. Layers and layers of crap.
I think he may be talking about "Formation, chemical evolution, and solidification of the calcium carbonate dense liquid phase" but some things got mixed up.
Could be something going on in the "calcifying matrix" but not sure if it plays a role in the tank in general. In the calcifying matrix of corals acidic proteins play a major role.
From the video, it claimed:
Doug does go off in part of the interview about how Kalkwasser and Sodium carbonate sequester all of the the CO2 and there is not enough for coral photosynthesis. I have heard Craig Bingman mention this in his talks on Kalkwasser chemistry, but it seems to be very extreme examples, and not likely to happen in an aerated box of water with animals living in it.
From the video, it claimed:
Okay, and there's a very special piece of chemistry which is um it was known as a kinetic constraint of um of carbon dioxide. So basically, the car (audio lags momentarily) this chemistry but effectively it means that it takes these crystals, it takes from these little bicarbonate crystals in preference to bringing in carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. And that's why the pH is maintained with the bolus system.
From the video, it claimed:
But actually inadvertently we were doing this 30 years ago and we were creating these amazingly stable systems by putting scoops of bicarb into the system not knowing at all what was happening with the chemistry. Yeah but now because we've got all these tools we can see the effect of what it does.
From the video, it claimed:
Yeah but now because we've got all these tools we can see the effect of what it does. So the bicarbonate what it does is it creates like a micro Crystal. You can't see it, but it's adhering to a surface and that surface has to be relatively clear of that bacteria that we were talking about, that biofilm.