What I got out of the article is that your medium PH is NOT controlled much by simply adjusting the PH of the solution before you water or feed the plants. So don't go crazy if your PH-meter is not very accurate, it doesn't really matter
It is the NUTRIENTS that are imporant, because of the enourmous effect they have on your mediums PH over time.
So read the label on your bottle of Nitrogen-source. Like this:
I use BioBizz FishMix, it has a total of 6% nitrogen, in which:
3.2% is ammonium nitrogen.
2.8% is nitrate nitrogen.
According to the article, this amount of ammonium nitrogen will make my medium very acidic over time.
But if the N-source had mainly been nitrate, then the opposite would happen and it would get alkaline!
Ammonium N:
"When ammoniacal nitrogen is taken up by roots, the plant
can secrete an acidic H+ into the soil solution. The more H+ contained in the root media, the lower the media
pH."
Nitrate:
"In contrast, uptake of nitrate nitrogen increases substrate-
pH because basic OH- or HCO3- are secreted by plant roots into the root media. Since OH- and HCO3- are bases, nitrate uptake therefore
can cause the media-
pH to increase"
Combo with 25% ammoniacal N, and 75% nitrate N:
"Ammoniacal nitrogen is about three times stronger an acid than nitrate nitrogen is a base. For example, a
fertilizer such as
17-4-
17 has about 25 percent ammoniacal nitrogen and 75 percent nitrate nitrogen (1 NH4-N:3 NO3-N ratio), and the reaction produced by the
17-4-
17 fertilizer tends to be
neutral."
This was news to me, which is a bit weird - sounds like something we all should know.
Edit: Thanks and rep+ to the OP for the link.