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  #1  
Old 02-17-2015, 02:57 PM
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Looks like Cyano to me.
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  #2  
Old 02-17-2015, 04:24 PM
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Craigdillman Craigdillman is offline
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Cyano too me too increase flow and manually remove it will doscourge growth it should go on it's own in time there are some products out there that fix it I've used a few and both worked good just follow the directions but if it's a small case flow and wc and time should solve it
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Old 02-17-2015, 05:49 PM
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Dosing vinegar with a big skimmer for export and a uv light has worked awesome for me. My tank is 300gal, and was started November 2014. I had the same issues you describe and also had a fair bit of hair algae and a really cloudy bacterial bloom too. It was so bad at one point I could suck out the cyano and within about 10 minutes it would be back. I have been dosing 30ml vinegar daily since I started the tank and in the last few weeks the that has become completely clear of algae. Reefwars posted a vinegar dosing regimen. I have been sticking to .1 ml per gallon vinegar and am now slowly increasing the vinegar to 40ml per day. Nitrate and phosphate are 0.
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Old 02-17-2015, 06:11 PM
Simmy Simmy is offline
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I've used Chemi-clean in the past and the Cyano hasn't come back! Its a good product to use but it'll make your skimmer go nuts for about a week.
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Old 02-17-2015, 09:21 PM
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I used Chemi-clean like Simmy and it works very well. I got mine on Amazon.
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Old 02-17-2015, 11:06 PM
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I like vinegar because you can continue to add it after the problem blooms go away for nitrate and phosphate export. If anything it seems to make my skimmer pull more 'gunk' and there's no excessive foaming whatsoever. You could always message reefwars. Or call Denny at Concept Aquarium in Calgary. He has a wealth of knowledge about dosing and his advice has done nothing but good for me.

Last edited by Skimmin; 02-17-2015 at 11:10 PM.
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Old 02-17-2015, 11:47 PM
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The phosphate test is tough to distinguish the exact shade sometimes, but it always tests between .25 and .5. It been like that since I got the test kit.
I don't think its a major problem right now but I know cyano in a freshwater tank can go from minor to major very quickly.
I would like to stay away from chemicals like chemiclean unless no other options work for me. I not a big fan of adding chemicals, I would rather adjust some things and see what happens.
I've heard about the vodka dosing but have never tried it. I get very busy in the summer and would have a hard time dosing everyday. I will do some more reading on the subject.

For now I made some adjustments to my chaeto and lighting in the sump. I've turned the output in the sump to point at the chaeto which is keeping it tumbling. I also moved my powerheads and outputs in my main tank to point towards some areas that have the most cyano.

I thought that turbo snails don't eat cyano but its mowing down a lot of the red algae on my glass. That's the main reason I was not sure if it was cyano or not.
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