Hi all,
That is partially why I don't like a pH value without an indication of carbonate buffering (alkalinity (ANC)), it doesn't really tell you very much. Conductivity is, in some ways, <"a less useful measure">, but it is much easier to measure and a linear scale.
If you don't have many ions of any description, you don't have much carbonate buffering, it is just nice and straightforward.
cheers Darrel
What @hax47 & @Andy Pierce say you need to reduce the alkalinity (dKH) to below about 4dKH before pH will drop much below pH8. That is why @_Maq_ has used acid neutralising capacity (ANC) as a measure of carbonate buffering in <"Some handy facts about water">.Reducing the KH to half should in theory reduce the pH by ~0.2 if you have the same CO2 levels, so a smaller pH reduction relative to KH is normal. The connection between the KH and pH is on a logarithmic scale.
That is partially why I don't like a pH value without an indication of carbonate buffering (alkalinity (ANC)), it doesn't really tell you very much. Conductivity is, in some ways, <"a less useful measure">, but it is much easier to measure and a linear scale.
If you don't have many ions of any description, you don't have much carbonate buffering, it is just nice and straightforward.
cheers Darrel
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