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#1
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![]() I heard of that solution that you put in your tank and it removes nitrate but I haven;t heard any good things about it and I doubt it works.
25 percent water change a month isn't really that much. I am not saying one of those abrasive reefers and say it isn;t enough and start to preach but in the scheme of things 25 percent a week is possible. It takes longer but it isn't that much of an inconvenience. I would start changing your water more frequently for starters. try a 25 percent every two weeks and if it isn;t enough try it every week. Also, if you are skimming the skimmer will not remove the nitrates, it will only remove the dissolved organics (pre nitrate material) so you will basically have to dilute the water enough with fresh water and then use a skimmer to prevent the nitrates. Also, you will find if you put more nitrate in your tank and leave some of the algae and coraline on your glass sides and back so it doesn't obstruct view) you will see the nitrates PREVENTED. Certain filter feeding inverts like clams and some corals absorb dissolved nutrients for nourishment. If you stick some of these creatures in the tank they should also PREVENT nitrates...but make sure the water is below 10 ppm before you try this. In conclusion, the only true way to get rid of nitrates is to add new water There is an old adage: The solution to pollution is dilution. So use the advice I gave you to keep the nitrate in check, after you get rid of it.
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System: 30 gal, various soft and LPS coral. 3 powerheads, 96 watt light, backpack skimmer and a 1/13 HP cooler, running overtime. 1 anorexic Fuzzy Lionfish. |
#2
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![]() Macro algae's! Chaeto works really well.
One can also do research on the sulfur and coil denitrators, both are well proven technology. Both work well if setup, sized and used correctly. I'm waiting on albert to chime in on zeolite based systems ![]() |
#3
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![]() Just to jump in here. I agree that you should do water changes. I do 10% per week myself.
As long as you are changing at least 25% per month it will help. It is just better to spread it out to bi-weekly or weekly is even better. Do you have a deep sand bed in your tank? A lot of testing has been done running a bucket filled with reef sand outside of the aquarium. It must be kept UNLIT and the sand is generally about 8 inches deep. You can use one of those big instant ocean tubs or the ones at home depot. Cut a hole in each side (1 a bit lower than the other). Add a bulkhead to each and feed water from the sump into the bucket at the higher bulkhead and then back to the sump through the lower one. Most accounts have this reducing nitrates to nothing. Also Chaeto Algae in the sump can do wonders. |
#4
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Way too much time and money has gone into this hobby....and yet, I CAN'T STOP |
#5
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![]() Here is the link on Deep Sand Buckets. (IE Fluidized Sand Beds) It is a great, if not long read.
Follow this and you will have no Nitrates. Enjoy. http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/pr...5&pagenumber=1 |
#6
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![]() What skimmer(s) are you using, and what is your total water volume(s)
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I would start up a big-ass macro algae refugium, and blast it with a cheap 400w magnetic ballast & bulb from the electrical/lighting store. The macro algae will suck up your nitrates and phosphates. Another solution to nitrates is a remote deep sand bed. Fill a couple old salt buckets with regular play sand 80% full, install 2 bulkheads above the sand level at each end, and pump water slowly over the top. There is a huge thread about RDSBs on reef central. This is so cheap, why not try it? You already have the buckets, I bet you have a powerhead, all you need to buy is cheap play sand, and some bulkheads. The theory goes that passing water over the top, water will slowly diffuse through the bucket, to anerobic zones where denitrifying bacteria are, and this will strip away your nitrates over time. |
#7
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![]() I found that the DSB in a bucket was not as effective as it was claimed to be. In 6 months 60lbs of aragonite in a 8gallon bucket did not touch my nitrate levels anywhere near the same level as was done with growing cheato in a wee little aquaclear lit by 2 9w PC's.
I'm not saying it's useless, but I am saying that I tried it, exactly as was suggested in that thread listed at RC, and I found the results vastly underwhelming compared to the promises made therein. Perhaps my tank had a problem that counter acted the benefits but nobody was able to offer any solid suggestions. Tank is now tore down anyhow so it's a moot point, but just thought I'd throw my experience out there. You can still try it of course, the theory is solid. Nitrate buildup is a result of the balance between that which produces nitrates and that which consumes or reduces nitrate (be it water changes, skimming, nutrient absorption, whatever). A DSB should have nitrate reducing ability so adding a DSB should theoretically help, but I find a 5g or 8g salt bucket doesn't give you enough surface area to truly be an optimal method. I think 60 lbs. of aragonite 4" deep over a larger surface area (so say a sump or remote shallow tank or something like that) would be far superior to 60lbs of aragonite 15" deep over a 12" diameter circular surface area (or whatever it is those buckets are). It's just that the bucket is cheap and everyone has hundreds of them so why not put them to use. But it's just not the optimal use of the idea.
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#8
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![]() I don't run RDSBs because I don't need to because of my fuge as well, just thought I would throw it out there as a potentially cheap fix.
I think the concensus was that you need 1 bucket per 80 or 90 gallons of water in your system. I would do a fuge first. You can also include a "xenia basket". This a floating basket that you throw into a large fuge, and put xenia into. Xenia grow quickly and pull crap out of your water too, but you need the basket or they dont get any light due to the macro algae, especially chaeto. |