My ph in my tanks is 7.8.
1ppm not 2ppm and I doubt they would do anything as its not regulated according to the city water report, they detect ranges from 0.07ppm all the way to 0.72ppm So thinking about that it makes since that it could be 1ppm if the 0.72ppm is inconsideration before they add chloramine the additional ammonia from chloramine would be enough to push it to the 1ppm. Also our water service is already in plenty of trouble with the EPA gosh bless them and they are so kind as to pass that trouble on to us in the form of 100% rate increase over 5 years.
http://www.kcmo.org/idc/groups/water/documents/waterservices/wqr2011.pdf "Nice water quality report"
My favorite is this, I am pretty sure I wouldn't want to drink any of this even if it was in ppt, looking ate the report I am amazed what is okay to have in H20 and still call it H20.
PARAMETER DATE TESTED VIOLATION UNITS MCL MCLG KCMO AVG KCMO RANGE
Cyanide 2011 NO ppb 200 200 8 ND - 53
My over head filter does a decent job of getting the bio media evenly covered but could possibly do a bit better I will look into how I can spread it more mabye drip try. Although drip trays make me nervous with my setup the size of the pump and how it pumps the water into the filter allows fairly large size debres to pass through the pump and could clog a drip tray.
I am pretty sure this time the Bacteria died from zero water movement, zero heating, and zero food when the gfi tripped while I was not home for a few days. I think that coupled with the fact that possibly my fish are out growing the amount of bio media, lead to this crash.
The first time and the one I am drawing from in this thread was 100% because I went from over 5000gph through a 220 gallon tank to only 700gph, there was simply not enough circulation and the bacteria was not really seed and populated for a slow flow setup.