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Egypt, Cairo
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Review on ๐Ÿ” Seachem Neutral Regulator: Enhanced SEO-friendly Product by Jessica Rogers

Revainrating 4 out of 5

If your tap water has a very high PH, consider another product

First, the product seems to be working to some extent, but the Los Angeles County Stone Water seems to be there. walking around and doing other weird things. This review covers two different topics. If you're serious about keeping fish, you'll be shocked to learn that my tap water has a natural pH of 8.2. It also has KH 5 and GH 7 on an API test I have. I keep a 10 gallon aquarium lightly planted with soil and aquasoil substrate. The product directions say to use 1 teaspoon per 10-20 gallon aquarium to maintain a pH of 7, "or more if needed," which I add to my water change. But here's the rub: I use 1/2 teaspoon per gal to only achieve a PH of 7.6. What is that? 500% recommended dose? And that's just tap water in a gallon jug that I use during water changes, not the actual PH in the tank (which was never below 7.6 during the roughly 6 week period I added Fluval Stratum, the has now burned out and stopped). buffering.) And while this doesn't seem to change my GH, it definitely changes the KH of the water, going up to 13.5, which makes sense in a way, but still! What's more, in my testing so far, it seems like I doubled the dose to 1 teaspoon per gallon of water and left it at that, giving me a reading of maybe 7.4 PH and KH, doubling again. Seems like a lot of product to make minimal returns in my circumstances. In the future I may try getting an acidity regulator from Seachem to be more aggressive with my PH issues. At this point my yearlings have become accustomed to the increased PH and are doing quite well and exhibiting breeding behavior at times, but if I really want to take my hobby to the next level I either need to figure out how to manage the PH can sink more, or give up tropical fish and switch to saltwater. However, I will continue to use the product for the time being as it works better than the Petco brand PH reducer which I gave up and had a sudden, unexpected change. I want to explore more on my tank. If you have a planted aquarium you might be interested in this: When I first received the product I read the label and instructions but somehow didn't realize that it also removes chlorine and chloramine from tap water and used the water further. I had a dechlorinator (Seachem Prime) with me for the first few months. Then, just a few weeks ago, I read the Regulator bottle again and realized I was using a double treatment, so I decided to only use the Regulator for my semi-annual 30% water change. To my surprise there was a tremendous change in plant growth over the next week, up to an inch of new, large, healthy shoots. My stem plants now look like palm trees because they were nothing more than canes with a few shaggy leaves that didn't last long and are now suddenly branching out to their full size! For a whole year I struggled to keep my plants alive and growing, I tried liquid fertilizers, I tried doing frequent water changes, I tried doing less water changes, I added new soil to the tank. Nothing. Plants that were once awesome just died out with no response, including the damn duckweed! You know something's wrong when the duckweed fights! But for a week I only used the Regulator, a sudden improvement on my remaining stem plants. This may be a coincidence but I am following and submitting this idea and will update my review in the coming months if true or false.

Pros
  • Weight
Cons
  • Some minor issues