hope this gets some feed back because my ro machine brings my ph down to 4.3 and most people i talk to say theirs is in the mid 5s
Illegal im confused by your assumtion of your tap water not being good to use as the data your giving would lean the opposite way. Your tap water is more resistent to flux which is a good thing while your comment on your RO means it takes very little for the ph to jump or lower then you back this up with the tap water actually dropped slightly which would help compensate any jump from nutrient salts fed back by plants so by your posts your tap would be much better then your RO for stability..
Quote is from another post.You guys really need to read what is posted here, especially from Filthy Fletch.
https://www.rollitup.org/hydroponics-aeroponics/230241-water-question-ro-distilled-ph.html
It is about whether PURE, Filtered water is better than water with lots of minerals in it, and controling spiking pH levels.
I am beginning to think RO or Filtered or Distilled water is NOT best for pH control........maybe.
My reasoning is based on what I have read that says buffers aren't just generally buffers, tending to hold pH wherever you set it. Instead my impression is buffers tend to hold PH to a certain range. So my water doesn't resist fluctuation, just fluctuation away from 7. If you want your pH in a 5.5-6 range you want a buffer that, because of its chemical properties, tends to hold pH there. But since mine seems to want to hold it to 7, I'd be fighting an uphill battle to keep it under 7. That's what I meant when I said your water is very fortunately a buffer right in the range you want. At least that's what I'm getting when I try to connect all these dots, but who knows. The more I try to learn about pH the dumber I feel.
Illegal, what nutes are you using? Just for purposes of determining acidity or alkalinity?
Update if anyone is still following this: my little experiment is at 24 hrs and there is no further drift in either water after the initial drop in the tap water which I assume was due to all the pH down kicking in.
Illegal, I don't know the science behind buffering or anything like that. I learned the stuff from being into fish. Also, I have noticed that my pH differs depending on what it comes out of. I've had 8.0 water out of my hose, 6.0 out of the tap. Plastic's and other material can affect the pH. I know with the AN nutes I have used, the pH has been very consistent, enough where I don't check it daily. I use glass jugs for mixing and holding water, just trying to avoid contaminates that mess with the pH TDS reading. It's the calcium and magnesium and other minerals that buffer the tap water. If you have some friends that have salt water fish tanks ask them about buffering. Hopefully your pH settles down.
Illegal, I don't know the science behind buffering or anything like that. I learned the stuff from being into fish. Also, I have noticed that my pH differs depending on what it comes out of. I've had 8.0 water out of my hose, 6.0 out of the tap. Plastic's and other material can affect the pH. I know with the AN nutes I have used, the pH has been very consistent, enough where I don't check it daily. I use glass jugs for mixing and holding water, just trying to avoid contaminates that mess with the pH TDS reading. It's the calcium and magnesium and other minerals that buffer the tap water. If you have some friends that have salt water fish tanks ask them about buffering. Hopefully your pH settles down.
By the way in my experiment, both water samples are holding steady after 48 hrs. I don't expect them to move anymore. The only real finding is that it took a ton of pH down to get the tap water from 7 to 5.7, and very little for the distilled.