I think I will be adding some percentage of distilled water to my water to lower my hardness and ph (GH - about 9
Kh - 2-3 (it is hard to tell the colors EXACTLY) --- this is from my *tank*... If I should test my tap, I will..

Get a quality digital meter, and calibrate it frequently.and how to test with a ph so low
I'm not sure. The blurb I can find on the Web doesn't appear to say. I would expect that if it has a large effect on the water, it woudl clearly state so.hotsauce48 wrote:That tetra blackwater extract does not effect you're ph.And it also stays stable if you dose and restore it properly after chaning water.
but if I use RO water, that will get me where I want, no?
Yes, just mix it until you get a nice stable pH just below seven.Yes, a mix of RO and tap-water should be able to create the right conditions for you - just adjust the mix of water to suit the conditions you want.
I would not include any kind of leaves in a tank set up for warm water rheophilic Ancistrini. There will probably not be leaves in the natural habitat, as the water will be running too fast.am going to try and recreate the habitat semi-naturally (oak leaves, etc.).
I think - my interpretation - Racoll basically wrote rheophilic fish don't life in blackwater. thinking about it, i think he is right (that is, if I may read him this way)racoll wrote: I would not include any kind of leaves in a tank set up for warm water rheophilic Ancistrini. There will probably not be leaves in the natural habitat, as the water will be running too fast.
Decomposing organic material (like leaves) in the tank will remove precious oxygen, and when keeping delicate, oxygen hungry fish like L239, I would concentrate of maximising oxygen, especially as these fish need to be kept warm, at 27-29C.