<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10218195#post10218195 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by SPC
Have these tanks had vacuuming of the sand, sand stirrers etc... employed, or were they run like the DSB method that Dr Ron uses (which is what the vast majority of us used when setting up a DSB)? What type of sand was used? How old are these tanks?[/i]
Most would have sand stirrers, and medium to coarse sand. I think DR. Ron is framing it as the most efficient way of developing denitrifying bacteria, and not necessarily the most efficient way of running a tank.
Things go wrong when only portions of someone's recipe for success is used. I'm sure a means of detritus suspension was advocated by Dr. Ron. I assume Dr. Ron doesn't have detritus build-up in his substrate.
I certainly don't doubt that many people get vast detritus deposits, as I've dismantled these tanks many times. I haven't however, seen a successful tank that had significant build-up in the sand. I attribute this to a high redox potential, good nutrient export & mechanical filtration, proper flow dynamics for detritus suspension and removal, and sand sifters.
A tank with true sand sifters (not just stirrers) will not require any maintenance to the sand bed. Once again, you will lose some biofilms as a result, but to the greater good of the aquarium. Reef tanks devoid of sand sifters will have algae blooms in the sand, and detrital accumulations.
I don't understand how the use of Phosban would help here, Mr Wilson? Are you running the Phosban in some location other than the main tank?
The phosban is located in the sump. As phosphate is removed from solution, phosphate is leached from calcareous media. The substrate is no longer need as a passive adsorption media.
I just vacuumed my 2 month old SSB (3" or so) and found plenty of reason (detritus) to vacuum it.
A new tank will have difficulty breaking down organics as quickly as they form. You may have a different success rate after a year of bacterial and benthic invertebrate development.
I agree 100% with you that husbandry plays a huge part in this, but just the nature of sand will place limitations on this. For example, I currently am at the maximum of flow, any more and the sand will be carved out to the bottom glass and piled up in other areas. This is not a unique problem however, experienced reefers have been looking for this magic flow rate for years now.
As I stated earlier, it's not a magic flow rate, but a flow pattern (quality rather than quantity). I find 15 to 20 times the volume of the tank to be adequate
if the flow pattern is correct. You may have conflicting flow patterns that cause swirling motions to trap detritus on the bottom. A tank 40 times the volume turnover, with chaotic flow patterns will surely be problematic.
I use a 100 micron filter bag, but this dosen't help with some (maybe 50%?) detritus and food that gets to the SSB.
Your water flow should be able to remove all traces of flake food from the tank in 10 minutes without any settling on the substrate. Floating flake food should be collected by the overflow within 60 seconds without sinking (unless caused by fish).
How does the phosphate get out of the plenum (DSB)?
Phosphate binds to calcareous media, and is not freely floating around the plenum, to any extent greater than the phosphate readings of the display tank water. As phosphate is removed from the water column, more phosphate will leach from the DSB.
If this is true, then how does a passive DSB/SSB accomplish this?
My comment was that it (RFUGF) would be a more efficient sand bed for your needs, which is detritus deduction. A static sand bed is for nitrate reduction, not detritus reduction. It's difficult to do both well at the same time.