pH is not changed or much affected as it passes thru the soil. It takes at a minimum 35 to 40 min for the lime (or whatever you use to buffer) to start buffering the solution that sits in contact with the soil. Don't obsess over pH in soil, ESPECIALLY if you are organic. The only pH value you need concern yourself with is the pH of the soil itself, not what gets put in or what comes out. If the soil pH was properly set at the beginning (with lime, dolomite, oyster shell, whatever you use) then it will not change for the duration of your grow. This is why I suggest people build their own soils, and set that pH at the onset, that way you KNOW whats up, not guessing. There is a tutorial on pH, and how to check it in soil in my journals. Check it out.
Nothing you put into the soil will change the pH value. If it DOES effect it, it will be temporary at best. The lime in the soil will change the pH of anything in contact with it and bring it to that value. After you add the lime, the only way that pH will change permanently is to dissolve out all the added lime. Hope this makes sense.
In a nutshell, as Cann said, don't obsess over pH in soil.