Hi all,
In the UK, if you have hard tap water, you can add calcium and carbonate hardness (dKH) <"via your tap water"> in a ratio of 1 dGH : 1 dKH. Magnesium you can add via <"Epsom Salts"> (~ 10% Mg).
If you want to <"add dGH, but not dKH">, you can use calcium chloride or calcium sulphate (CaSO4.2H20), although calcium sulphate has very limited solubility.
cheers Darrel
Yes. They are aiming at the USA market, where a lot of tap water is both hard and rich in both calcium (Ca) and magnesium (Mg). This isn't true of the water in the UK (soft or hard), which doesn't normally contain <"much magnesium">.The ASG fertilizer kit seems to be missing out on the magnesium then?
There are <"lies, damn lies...."> and the <"advertising blurb"> of <"Aquarium fertiliser"> companies. The ASG video isn't terrible, it is a mixture of the good, the bad and the ugly really.How does this fertilizer claim to be the better than the rest?
That one.To be clear, potassium is not a substitute for magnesium. As @MrClockOff has said, there’s little magnesium in uk water. As you’re using RO, you need to add all 14 required ions for your plants to grow. That includes magnesium and potassium.
"All in one" fertiliser mixes don't normally include calcium (Ca), mainly because it forms a <"lot of insoluble compounds">. Unscrupulous vendors will try and tell you (and sell you) a separate remineralising mix that <"isn't a fertiliser">, but the calcium (Ca) and magnesium (Mg) you add with calcium chloride (CaCl2.nH20) and magnesium sulphate (MgSO4.7H2O) are both. have a look at @Happi's <"Solufeed 2:1:4 and Solufeed Sodium Free TEC or Solufeed Coir TEC Combination">.I know I'm confused but I found this decision, please see attached
In the UK, if you have hard tap water, you can add calcium and carbonate hardness (dKH) <"via your tap water"> in a ratio of 1 dGH : 1 dKH. Magnesium you can add via <"Epsom Salts"> (~ 10% Mg).
If you want to <"add dGH, but not dKH">, you can use calcium chloride or calcium sulphate (CaSO4.2H20), although calcium sulphate has very limited solubility.
cheers Darrel