Thanks EoF.
To your question about lime, it is a conundrum I suppose. To me, the short answer would be quit using

soil. I know, that isn't going to satisfy those growers that want to be "organic" without being organic. Big difference in my opinion. Bottled fox farms, bottled biobizz, bagged and bottled everything. May as well grow chemical in Promix and save yourself a lot of headache. I don't think there is much difference honestly.
I digress though, I know, we are trying to help people regardless of style of growing. I think the answer is two fold, in the case where the grower has plants in soil and all of a sudden he realizes that the bagged soil was crap then lime isn't going to really help out because by the time it begins to react in the soil the grow is over and the soil is out back in a heap. Lime generally takes 6-12 months to raise pH to an acceptable level. Also, lime isn't water soluble so it isn't going to reach the root level very easily if the plants are in place. So, while adding lime might make the grower feel better it really didn't accomplish the task it was intended to do. If we need it raised quickly I would suggest Potassium Bicarbonate as a solution. It will increase the soil pH quickly, generally less than three days, add potassium to the soil and is OMRI listed as an organic fertilizer. It is a salt, so there is a possibility of doing damage to the soil and it will definitely increase the EC or electrical conductivity of the soil which may cause some tip burn.
The second fold of that answer is, if the grower is using the bagged soil, hasn't planted anything yet and has time to spare. Throw the crap out, lol, just kidding, sort of. I would probably add calcium silicate to the mix to get the soil raised and have the added benefit of getting silicone into the mix as well. Silicate is the same stuff used in rhino skin and all of those products that help increase cell wall formation except most of them are using potassium silicate and in this case we are using the calcium to help lower the pH.
That is just my two cents on the subject. I think lime is bunk with the short growth cycles we have unless we are using a soil over and over again or are cooking soil for extended periods. I also think it has been recommended so much because people look crap up on google and that is the first thing they see, use lime to raise soil pH. Well in a garden, when applied in Fall, it works. Indoors when we are turning soil over every 90 days it doesn't.
One last caveat. I use lime in my soil, not dolomite but calcitic lime. I use lime because I am reusing my soil for extended periods of time, not just one grow. So anyone that looks at my mix and wonders why I am saying what I am saying. That is the reason. Long term, lime is a great product. Short term, it is a waste of money.