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Can you start collecting rain water for your system. There is a good chance your tap water is just really really hard and topping up the new system is probably keeping the pH high.
My tap water (which is well water out of a limestone aquifer) will keep my systems buffered up to about 7.6 when I'm using lots of well water for top ups. If I switch to using rain water to top up my pH will actually drop to the point that I have to add some buffers back in (like alternate adding some potassium bicarbonate with using the well water to top up on occasion to keep it buffered to about 6.4.)
Aquaponics naturally lowers pH so unless there is something in the system that is buffering the pH up, it should come down in time. The harder you work the bio-filter the faster pH tends to drop but if you are topping up with really hard tap water you are essentially adding the buffers in that way so the choices there become, 1-use rain water or 2-soften your water or use an RO filter.
When you have adjusted the pH using acid, did the pH always just come right back up the next day? Or did it stay down until you topped up the system again?
Aquaponics naturally lowers pH so unless there is something in the system that is buffering the pH up, it should come down in time. The harder you work the bio-filter the faster pH tends to drop but if you are topping up with really hard tap water you are essentially adding the buffers in that way so the choices there become, 1-use rain water or 2-soften your water or use an RO filter.
When you have adjusted the pH using acid, did the pH always just come right back up the next day? Or did it stay down until you topped up the system again?
I don't have numbers because it depends on so many things as to how much rain water it would take. Do you know how much water you top the system up with? I know that if I use rain water to top up my 300 gallon system for a month the pH definitely drops compared to if I'm topping up with my well water.
Now I know of people who say they have done things like add a couple oak logs (like pieces of fire wood) into their tanks to help lower pH. I'm testing that idea out on one of my systems right now but It hasn't been a week yet so I'm not seeing any results.
A water softener that removes minerals from the water (like for keeping lime scale from building up in your water heater and such) can work but it will likely also add some salt to your water so it may not be that great.
RO filters can be costly which is why I haven't gone that way myself but I'm having issues with lack of rain too.
if the weather is cool, I hope you like water cress. Granted my system was 7.6 but watercress went mad last winter for me. In summer I seem to do well with water chestnuts in full sun and several inches of water over the gravel in a constant flood bed. I've managed to grow bananas to the point of cracking grow beds in that 7.6 system as well.
If you are using concrete you may need to create a barrier between the concrete and the water to prevent leaching. I do not know if paint is the best product to use. When I had the same problem with my ferrocement tanks I had to drain the system and coat the concrete. I found paraffin to be the best and cheapest option. I melted the paraffin in am old pot and painted it onto the concrete. Then melted I the paraffin into the concrete with a torch. Now water beads off the sides of the tanks and I have never had a pH issue since.
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