Thats a shame, it is good reading. You could learn a lot.<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=6681011#post6681011 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by crypt-keeper
well I subscribed to this thread a while back but yet to read any of it.
400ppm is adequate for the Calcium, and might ease up on the alkalinity dosing requirement. Why are you trying to maintain more than 3meq/l anyway ?I keep the calc at 450ppm, alk always needs buffering, ecery morning its down to 3meq/L, so I hit it with b-ionic, 1mL/gal. That brings it up to about 4. dosing kalk in the ato water. I;ve gottin rid of all my fish, still no3>10ppm.
You need to say more about your sand bed, grain size, composition and depth. What maintanence have you been doing. How old is your system ?I decided to suck the water out of the tank close to the sand, and fill at the same time. Now im getting somewere, its like the dsb is holding all the no3 and po3. I even replaced the sand with sugar sized arag. about 4 months ago. the tank had a fowl sell coming from it, the only way to get rid of it was slowly remove 50% of the sand that I could get to, so it looked BB in the front. then i when back to adding sand again later. the bad smell did go away when i removed the sand. I just bought a small calc reactor setup yesturday. this will be an attempt to keep my alk from swinging all the time. mag is 1290ppm.
It sounds dangerous.I did add one sand sifter, I forget what it was, has a long cylinder shaped shell, with orange on it, some type of snail???
As far as getting your Acro's growing, I think you need to get the nitrates down farther, like less than 1 or 2 ppm. If your sand bed is deep enough, and you leave it alone, then your nitrate should drop within a couple of mos., so long as feeding is sparse.
> Barry