mr.wilson
.Registered Member
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10218384#post10218384 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by SPC
...and again, you are the first reefer I have seen accomplish this flow pattern in a SB tank that can keep all the detritus in suspension. Heck, I just got finished running a BB tank that I couldn't keep all the detritus in suspension.[/i]
The TOTM is full of such tanks. heavy detrital build-up may be commonplace, but it isn't inevitable. You will be hard pressed to find a succesful tank that is plagued with detritus build-up issues. Siphoning and sand replacement isn't the key to their successes.
If this is the cure for a build up in a DSB, how is it that DSB's in nature (low flow and high organic like our little closed systems) go eutrophic, or are you saying that the flow rate and nutrient load of your tank more closely approximates the sand around a reef?
I wasn't aware that natural reefs went eutrophic due to detrital build-up in the substrate.
How about the accumulation of phosphate?
I don't think phosphate accumulation is a problem for users of Phosban or Rowaphos etc. Phosphate is a surfactant that readily goes into solution as space becomes available for it in bulk water.
Well we might as well include more of the story here, if one of these people is Paul? You know that he has said in the past that he has a piece of asphalt in his tank, don't you?
What's wrong with asphalt? Does he have a nuisance algae problems, nitrate issues, or detritus build-up?