From what I read it tends to not last as long as other acids. I would stick to sulfuric and phosphoric if I were you. Sulfur is your friend BTW.Question!!...nitric acid could be PH DOWN?????right??
Nitric is better if the tapwater has a high calcium carbonate content, the byproduct is calcium nitrate, CO2 and water. If you use phosphoric acid you run the risk of precipitating calcium phoshate which is pretty useless to plants. Calcium sulfate isnt much use either.From what I read it tends to not last as long as other acids. I would stick to sulfuric and phosphoric if I were you. Sulfur is your friend BTW.
I would think calcium sulfate would be just as useful though. It's a decision of sulfur vs phosphorus. I add bloom booster if I want more phosphorus, sulfur is harder to supplement so I use this opportunity. Both are good options just depends on what you want to feed more of than is in your nutes already.Nitric is better if the tapwater has a high calcium carbonate content, the byproduct is calcium nitrate, CO2 and water. If you use phosphoric acid you run the risk of precipitating calcium phoshate which is pretty useless to plants.
Not true. The additional Ca is also available with sulfuric.The bonus of nitric is it makes the calcium that was unavailable..available. The additional Ca comes in handy for utilising the extra N With phos and sulphuric acid you dont get those extra perks.
I thought gypsum is calcium sulfate and that gypsum is a good source of calcium. Is that not true?Calcium sulfate isnt much use either.
It is, it's one of the most common sources in Hydro Nutes. He doesn't know what he is talking about.I thought gypsum is calcium sulfate and that gypsum is a good source of calcium. Is that not true?
@RM3 Want to help straighten this guy out?The N/Ca provided by the nitric are mutually beneficial. Sulphuric doesnt give the same mutual benefit, plants can tolerate a wide range of S but its not top of a plants essential element list
Its worth noting, calcium directly affects the availability of 7 elements (P,K,Mg,Fe,B,Zn and Mn). No other single element has that kind of impact on the rest.
Try making a concentrated liquid solution using gypsum as the calcium source.I thought gypsum is calcium sulfate and that gypsum is a good source of calcium. Is that not true?
Yeah, some brands also throw in citric acid, acts as a bit of a buffer.MSDS for Dyna-Gro pH Down says it's 33% phosphoric acid and 11.5% nitric acid. Rest is water. I assume GH and the others are similar.
...available from your friendly local AutoZone, seriously. I've used it, works fine.From what I read it tends to not last as long as other acids. I would stick to sulfuric and phosphoric if I were you. Sulfur is your friend BTW.
Really? So in hard water this would be the go-to choice, then?The bonus of nitric is it makes the calcium that was unavailable..available. The additional Ca comes in handy for utilising the extra N With phos and sulphuric acid you dont get those extra perks.
Clearly, you know your chemistry. We should talk more...Try making a concentrated liquid solution using gypsum as the calcium source.
@ nomofatum
Nute manufacturers use calcium nitrate as the calcium source in just about everything.check the label
Calmag contains calcium nitrate and magnesium nitrate for good reason. Your argument says calcium sulfate/mag sulfate would be as good?
Mix a concentrated solution of calcium nitrate and magnesium sulfate (epsom) together and see if you can get the resulting calcium sulfate (cream cheese) to dissolve in water.
I don't know why concentration entered the conversation. I just want to be clear: if someone's treating a calcium def, gypsum (calcium sulfate) wouldn't be "much use?"Try making a concentrated liquid solution using gypsum as the calcium source.