Just thought I would let everyone know that during the effects of tap water on nitrfying bacteria experiment it was confirmed by myself and @sixty_reefer that Dr. Tim's claimed drop size and solution percentage is wrong.
They claim their drop size is .05ml.
I performed four tests of 16 drops measured with a syringe and received an average of 1.05ml. 1 ml twice and 1.1 ml twice.
Sixty_reefer tested this twice and received 1.1ml for 16 drops.
This comes in for an average of .066ml per drop.
Also, they claim the ammonia chloride solution is 4%. Through several stock solutions along with test results we have determined it is actually very close to 6%.
This may not sound like much, but with a couple of plugs into fishlores ammonia calculator you can see how this can lead to large over dosing.
For example, if you want produce a 2ppm solution by adding 4 drops per gallon in a 10 gallon tank per their instructions... you would add 40 drops.
You would actually be dosing 2.66ml instead of the intended 2ml at a 6% instead of 4% solution.
This would lead to 4.25 ppm NH4+NH3 level instead of the intended 2 ppm.
Over twice as high as intended.
I would start with one drop per gallon, test, and increase accordingly.
www.fishlore.com
They claim their drop size is .05ml.
I performed four tests of 16 drops measured with a syringe and received an average of 1.05ml. 1 ml twice and 1.1 ml twice.
Sixty_reefer tested this twice and received 1.1ml for 16 drops.
This comes in for an average of .066ml per drop.
Also, they claim the ammonia chloride solution is 4%. Through several stock solutions along with test results we have determined it is actually very close to 6%.
This may not sound like much, but with a couple of plugs into fishlores ammonia calculator you can see how this can lead to large over dosing.
For example, if you want produce a 2ppm solution by adding 4 drops per gallon in a 10 gallon tank per their instructions... you would add 40 drops.
You would actually be dosing 2.66ml instead of the intended 2ml at a 6% instead of 4% solution.
This would lead to 4.25 ppm NH4+NH3 level instead of the intended 2 ppm.
Over twice as high as intended.
I would start with one drop per gallon, test, and increase accordingly.
Aquarium Calculator - Fish Tank Volume, Heater Size, Chiller Size & More!
Aquarium size and volume calculator and many other common conversions. Uses tank dimensions for calculating fish tank size in gallons.
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