mvsjrs
New member
So, the good, the bad, the ugly. My LPS overall are static/poor health—although more static than looking like they are going to expire. They definitely don’t pass the 30k foot visual test. While I have lowered faith home testing, these are what I got from what kits I had on hand. Unless otherwise noted, the tests are taken from water sourced in the inductor tank since it is the immediate outflow of the display tank.
8.4 (Hanna pH pen)
1.024/1.025 salinity (Milwaukee tester)
13.7 kH (Hanna calorimeter)
0 ammonia (test strip)
<0.25 ammonia (Mardel kit)
0 nitrite (test strip)
0 nitrate (Hagen kit #1)
0 nitrate (Hagen kit #2)
2-5 ppm nitrate (Salifert kit)
12.5 ppm nitrate (Tetra kit)
0.1-0.25 ppm phosphate (Sera kit)
79.9 degF refugium (monitor)
78.6 refugium (pH pen)
78.5 sump (pH pen)
79.5 chiller
Because I got any ammonia reading at all on the sump, I tested directly in the display tank.
0.25-0.5 ammonia in DT (test strip)
Yikes!
Here’s my current theory. The heavy fish load is producing high levels of ammonia in the water column before it is taken up by bacteria. So the common reading is zero but a lot of ammonia is always being processed through the water column. This is irritating the LPS so they are more retracted/stagnated in growth.
A given problem with this setup from the beginning was that it was a commercial “reef ready” tank and therefore had one 1” bulkhead and one ¾” bulkhead. That was why another bulkhead was drilled through the back wall in order to safely run a siphon on the ¾” with two 1” pipes as backup. So, that means that turnover of water through the display tank is significantly reduced and the afore mentioned ammonia would be present in the DT then zero in the sump area.
So, for a couple of days, I will run the DT flow at full capacity with one 1” pipe. It will not siphon because the head pressure from the pump reduces the pump output too heavily and it is additional to the ¾" pipe. I might get a siphon by changing the stand tubes elevations so that only the 1” operates but for proof-of-principle, we will operate less optimally (noise) and safely (fail safe overflow) for a few days to see if we can get the ammonia to the live rock more quickly and have some visual improvement in corals.
8.4 (Hanna pH pen)
1.024/1.025 salinity (Milwaukee tester)
13.7 kH (Hanna calorimeter)
0 ammonia (test strip)
<0.25 ammonia (Mardel kit)
0 nitrite (test strip)
0 nitrate (Hagen kit #1)
0 nitrate (Hagen kit #2)
2-5 ppm nitrate (Salifert kit)
12.5 ppm nitrate (Tetra kit)
0.1-0.25 ppm phosphate (Sera kit)
79.9 degF refugium (monitor)
78.6 refugium (pH pen)
78.5 sump (pH pen)
79.5 chiller
Because I got any ammonia reading at all on the sump, I tested directly in the display tank.
0.25-0.5 ammonia in DT (test strip)
Yikes!
Here’s my current theory. The heavy fish load is producing high levels of ammonia in the water column before it is taken up by bacteria. So the common reading is zero but a lot of ammonia is always being processed through the water column. This is irritating the LPS so they are more retracted/stagnated in growth.
A given problem with this setup from the beginning was that it was a commercial “reef ready” tank and therefore had one 1” bulkhead and one ¾” bulkhead. That was why another bulkhead was drilled through the back wall in order to safely run a siphon on the ¾” with two 1” pipes as backup. So, that means that turnover of water through the display tank is significantly reduced and the afore mentioned ammonia would be present in the DT then zero in the sump area.
So, for a couple of days, I will run the DT flow at full capacity with one 1” pipe. It will not siphon because the head pressure from the pump reduces the pump output too heavily and it is additional to the ¾" pipe. I might get a siphon by changing the stand tubes elevations so that only the 1” operates but for proof-of-principle, we will operate less optimally (noise) and safely (fail safe overflow) for a few days to see if we can get the ammonia to the live rock more quickly and have some visual improvement in corals.