the correct answer is.. what do ur plants need? if ur plants use all the available calcium before ur water change, then u need more!! if they don't then u don't need more
I'd just use a standard GH booster, no need to add KH.Awesome great answers. So what I'm taking from this is that ratio is the most important thing? So an additional question if that is the case. My water is super soft. I typically add caco3 to bring up my calcium and kh at the same time. Is there a point where ca would start interfering with uptake of normal levels of other nutrients?
having a hard water doesn't always mean you have enough Mg, it might be 100% Ca only and 0 Mg, i had this coming out of my tap water where there is plenty of Ca and no Mg at all.This may not be you , so please don't take offense. I mean it as a general statement.
We sometimes get too involved in one small item that we notice and forget that it is not a big part of the overall question.
In my case, I have very hard alkaline water. Probably not the best for raising plants. But from my rookie position, I don't worry about that. It would be like sweating over bugs on the windshield of a car that won't start! If/when I get a better handle on the big items, like lights, CO2 and macros, I may get around to worries about the CA/MG. For now, I know I have plenty. It shows up on the glass every time I splash water.
This is very often the case. Most assume that high GH means plenty of both, but........this often gets folks into serious growth issues. I had this a long time ago.having a hard water doesn't always mean you have enough Mg, it might be 100% Ca only and 0 Mg, i had this coming out of my tap water where there is plenty of Ca and no Mg at all.
ratio, 4:1, 10:1, 20:1, 60:1,60:10 etc will work, same for 10:10, 10:5, 30:10 etc work too, but plant don't use much Mg, they use more Ca, 30ppm of Ca is plenty for high light tank, 8ppm or less Mg is also good enoughI personally have water that has 30 ppm CA and 0ppm Mg. The KH of my water is about 2.5dKH so I need to bring it up to prevent my water being super low in pH when I get get the right level of CO2 (I used the high tech method of injection). I add enough Mg to reach that 4:1 ratio since over the course of the week it ends at 3:1 with Ca being used. Although, now it sounds like that ratio isn't super important either.
Previously I noticed when I used baking soda to bump the KH to an area that worked by the end of the week my plants would stall because they used all the Ca!!! So that is when I started using CaCO3 to increase both. Not to mention less sodium in the water. I've just have had some deficiencies in micros, iron, and phosphate lately that I hadn't previously and I didn't know if it had to do with my calcium being up between 65 and 75 ppm now. It doesn't sound like at that level it really would matter significantly from what you all have said. So maybe it's just the limiting factors now like that law states? So I should up my levels? Does that sound right?