A local friend of mine not only used a drip system in his fish room (400 gallons per day) he also had one of the most sophisticated set ups I have seen, with some of the most uber expensive fish that one could own. At his peak, approx. 50K worth of fish swam in his tanks at one point. 30K just in black rays, and that was the wholesale cost, I was with him when he brought them in through customs.
Don't you reckon that my friend, and other folks on MFK that keep uber rare and uber expensive fish, own things such as tests for NH3, and pH probes?
This entire conversation is completely asinine. For any non believers, grab a container of tap water, treat with Prime/Safe, and test for yourselves. Your pH will not go up, nor will any free ammonia be released back into your tank.
Doc made some incorrect assumptions, such as Seachem Safe being the exact same chemical make up as ChlorAm-X, they are NOT. Posting links to patents doesn't mean anything. He even falsely assumed that Tetra was referring to Seachem in their patent, they were NOT. They were referring to a different water conditioner altogether! (ChlorAm-X) When I point that out he now says they are the same. Ya, right. My wife and I are the same too, we are both people. lol
The Doc's erroneous assumption that pH goes up, and NH3 is later released, was based on the info supplied in the patent for ChlorAm-X, not Seachem Prime, or Seachem Safe.
The Doc also stated;
"
Seachem Prime Does not contain ANY of the same things as
Seachem safe!! one is bacterial and one chemical, ignore the nonsense about them containing the same things.."
Doc don't have a clue. One is bacterial? LOL Anyone who has actually used these products (Prime/Safe) clearly understand that both are sulfur based. All one needs to do is pop a cap on a bottle of Prime to understand that - no need for a PhD.
Good Night Irene