Shrimp Mineral GH/KH+ 200G
Item Weight | 200 Grams |
Liquid Volume | 10 Liters |
Target Species | Shrimp |
Item Form | Powder |
M**Y
Itās what shrimp crave
Great to keep your shrimp healthy and happy
T**.
Dissolves easily
Great product!
G**S
Easy to Use
Since I use RO water a lot in my aquariums and new shrimp tank, I needed something to put the minerals by critters, especially shrimp, need back into the water at a specific level. This was easy to measure and dissolved easily into my RO water I replace in the tank after a water change.
H**
Remineralize RO water for consistent 7.0 ph
Because my tap water is very hard (600ppm tds) I use this to remineralize RO water to my desired ppm. I have been doing this for a year and seen consistent results. Seems to work well for my neocaridina shrimp, tetras, corys and betta tanks that enjoy neutral ph and soft water. You will need a tds pen or meter to do this reliably.
A**S
It works
Item came quickly and does what i need it to. Cherry shrimp seem happy with putting some of this into their tank.
A**N
It's hard to figure it out
Yea.... It's not that easy to figure it out how much should I put in the tank. Maybe I'm dump šµāš«
W**L
Don't Skimp - Buy This for Your Shrimp
I keep neocaridina aka red cherry shrimp. I found out too late that my well water has very low GH and very high KH - not good for these critters. My shrimps were slowly perishing and few babies were surviving. I bought this stuff and over a period of weeks began raising the GH of my tank. Now, a few months later, I don't tend to see dead ones often and the population seems to be increasing. Knock on wood!If you are in a similar situation, this seemed to work for me: I did one gallon changes with remineralized RO water once a week. After removing a gallon of tank water, I added in the remineralized water one pint at a time over the course of a day. I've read the shrimps are very sensitive to water parameter changes and I didn't want to shock them. Now I do water changes every other week with this method.I top off the tank with plain water, as the minerals remain after evaporation.I measure the powder as follows - requires a TDS meter. I read that my target TDS for cherry shrimp would be about 180. So I slowly added powder to a gallon of water until my TDS pen read 180, then I tested the GH/KH to make sure I was at my target. Now I just add a bit of powder to my bucket of RO water, measure the TDS, and then add more powder until I get to my target. If you have a sensitive scale, you could figure out the exact amount of powder you needed to get to your target TDS. I have found that sometimes the powder doesn't dissolve entirely right away, so the TDS will creep up a bit after about an hour. Hope that makes sense and hope someone finds it helpful!TL/DR: works good
R**N
Dissolves completely
Best thing about this product is it dissolves completely? Iāve used equilibrium and other products that leave sediment in the bottom of my RO tank no matter how I mix it.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 week ago