Actually they can "go bad", my drops were reading more than 1 full point off against a calibrated meter. I think the liquid gets oxidized over time, or I may have unknowingly cross contaminated my drops and ruined them
Actually they can "go bad", my drops were reading more than 1 full point off against a calibrated meter. I think the liquid gets oxidized over time, or I may have unknowingly cross contaminated my drops and ruined them
Have you compared them against a calibrated meter or any other pH checking method? Just curious. And yeah I agree it's not typical but it can happen, and I am VERY VERY careful about not sticking utensils into bottles i ALWAYS pour out into something.
Have you compared them against a calibrated meter or any other pH checking method? Just curious. And yeah I agree it's not typical but it can happen, and I am VERY VERY careful about not sticking utensils into bottles i ALWAYS pour out into something.
Yes, both a freshly calibrated Apera pH60 and directly with pH 7.0 calibration solution.
Actually, my nearly-empty bottle is only about two years old, not five (thanks Amazon!); maybe it does change over time?
I used bromothymol blue in college chem labs, the bottles looked older than me, I assumed it never goes bad, but have no idea.
I am curious- how do they work when the nutrients have added colors of their own-?
Plain water -yes but the myco I add is black/grey plus all the other stuff.
PH has to be checked after everything is added- before feeding
I am curious- how do they work when the nutrients have added colors of their own-?
Plain water -yes but the myco I add is black/grey plus all the other stuff.
PH has to be checked after everything is added- before feeding
Color doesn't really matter once it's placed in a vial.
I used FloraNova for a while, and it's the color of dark tea in a bucket.
It was barely noticeable in a small vial, and didn't interfere with the pH drops.