I wanted to discuss it as I am seriously interested if someone has used it before.
So Iām asking how you see strong and weak acids as equivalent. I donāt follow, but Iād appreciate learning.
The pure acid is different in pH, sulphuric very low pH, citric, for example, a bit higher. If you dilute the in water, you can bring the solution to pretty much any pH you want, up to the water pH of course, not higher.
So the differnce is the ratio between acid and water, how strong the base chemical was does not make a difference
I jump in here⦠Iām using Jackās 321 and if I use my tap water which I usually donāt but for example it plays in hereā¦
My tap ph is 7.5-7.8 depending on temp and ppm of 180⦠if I add Jackās 321 into the water it brings it down to around 6.8. My town however says the ph out of tap is no higher than 6.8⦠um bullshit. You canāt trust the 7.3 they are telling you⦠think they test it at the facility⦠then it travels miles in pipes to your house it has changed since it leftā¦
But I wouldnāt use sulfuric or hydrochloric acid plant wonāt like it much at all, Iād stick with lemon juice if it was me⦠Iāve used it after mixing Jackās on a super lemon haze for a laugh one night added about a 1/2 tsp to mix to bring it down⦠100% no sugar no additive lemon juice⦠not easy to find generally speaking but I have a bottle as a back up to my ph down.
But without any meters we are guessing, and those strong acids will easily drop you out of the 5.8-6.5 range with small amounts then you have to fight it back up. Want a weak acid so you arenāt far off.
Have you tried hitting a precise pH using strong acids and home equipment?
Edit for clarification: Have you tried hitting various target pH numbers, not just one, using strong aqueous acids diluted into water using droppers/pipettes?
I am adjusting pH to a certain value all the time in the lab using these strong acids but I have to admit that with home equipment this can be a bit more tricky.
I have measured my water pH today and it is 7.5, the soil pH is 6.6 , so maybe a tad too high but not by a lot. Do you think it is worth adjusting or should the plants be happy enough with 6.6?
I donāt adjust the pH of my soil with watering; I build a complex mix with hug buffering capacity and then I encourage a healthy microbe population in the rhizosphere. My municipal tap water is dead 7 with 10PPM, and I use it like that. I think you can do the same thing, although I would want to know more about the mineral content of your water.
I think @Myfriendis410 gave you sound advice. The plants are going to repurpose the oldest fan leaves and transpose mobile nutrients. If the new growth looks healthy, I wouldnāt interfere.