Water Clear D9

How can we do that? And what ph is needed?

You want your pH to be 7, you can get media with a range of pH. I can’t really be much more specific than that.

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Thanks for the feedback

What’s the patent #?

Id love to learn how to do this kinda math

Any links to any resources that might be useful?

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Has actual ratios instead of broad description

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Whoever stealing screen shots and trying to sell this as there own is a fake

I know you’ve got an account on here lemme find out who you are

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I wish, that would be neat. Suppose I could make one if I wanted to, like a spreadsheet you could just plug weights and pH values of the medias.

Maybe one day with all my non-existent “free-time” haha.

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It was @VerifiedConsultant

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you can look here.

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@Lincoln20XX, would this be a spreadsheet you could easily make?

He made the ffe spreadsheet pretty easy

I’m not sure about how it’s listed. However when I released the process the variables were different than they are now. We worked with non fraction collector heads and had to prep and distill with a bit different skill. The now adays processes people adjust media’s and fluid ratios to tailer each process remediation. I have been preaching this subject matter since I first came out with the key.

Overall many, even well knows here made fun of me and said people would never spend that kind of money on media’s - and we see where this took off.

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I have basic(pH:10) and neutral(6.5) powder aluminas…would these work to balance the ph without losing yield? Ive been wanting to do this in the crc process once i noticed slabs made with b80 would not sugar out as easily giving it a longer shelf life in shatter form. Im guessing the neutral ph made it harder for them to sugar out(crystalize). Almost all the medias being used currently are acidic

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Medias were also retailing for like 5x what they should have, so those guys werent wrong.
Reason why more people probably buy media from killa then they do all the big brand lab stores…
C bleach lol remember :thinking:

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Way before then it was magsil and silica 60. The typical lab grade products. Also the most common supplier was us silica back then who had a monopoly on product.

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If someone supplied me the data, absolutely.

…though by the time someone’s gone to the trouble of collecting it all in one place they’re about 97% of the way there.

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Idk i just match 3 parts b80/t5 with 2 parts magsil pr. Usually works pretty good if u go in with ph 7

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T5 has a pH of 7.1, I think it would be even better then 6.5 alumina

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I noticed xtractor depot and bvv say 2 different ph values

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I thought t5 was closer to ph 6.1 :man_shrugging:
I dont think its ph 5 though
B80 could be all over the place, probably ph5-7

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