Aqua sobriquet
Member
If the water is stored in a sealed container does the chlorine stay in solution then?
Ady34 said:Does that mean im wasting my money on chlorine and chloromine remover when im leaving my water overnight (24hrs) before adding to my tank, or am i best off continuing to add it just incase?
Thanks,
Ady.
Nope not wasting money as often water the treatment you add to your water also "takes out" heavy metals that might be present in the water (copper etc), as well a chlorine and chloramine.Ady34 said:Does that mean im wasting my money on chlorine and chloromine remover when im leaving my water overnight (24hrs) before adding to my tank, or am i best off continuing to add it just incase?
Thanks,
Ady.
Thanks for that, ill keep adding the water treatment.ian_m said:Nope not wasting money as often water the treatment you add to your water also "takes out" heavy metals that might be present in the water (copper etc), as well a chlorine and chloramine.Ady34 said:Does that mean im wasting my money on chlorine and chloromine remover when im leaving my water overnight (24hrs) before adding to my tank, or am i best off continuing to add it just incase?
Thanks,
Ady.
Years ago (maybe 20 odd), before Prime etc people used to either bubble an airstone through their stored water for 24hour before using or make their own dechlorinator using Hypo (sodium thiosulfate) from photographic shops (its fixer I think).
More here.http://www.skepticalaquarist.com/chlorine-chloramine
Is well worth a read.
No, it is an efficient disinfectant because it is a very strong oxidizing agent. This means that it forms compounds very easily and will react with any cations like sodium (Na+) or calcium (Ca++) to form sodium chloride (NaCl), calcium chloride (CaCl2), as well as any organic matter to form organochlorines like chloromethane etc.If the water is stored in a sealed container does the chlorine stay in solution then?