Help I have created a death trap!

You might want to take a sample of your tap water to your LFS to have it tested.

You might not be showing any Phosphates because it's all been absorbed by the algae growing in the tank.
 
Yeah you are right I meant ammonia.

quick update; not much time today to do anything but saw a glimpse of one damsel still alive and the turbos are still with us to. Maybe my tank is still young and not a lot of life yet. I bet I didn't acclimitize the hermits well.

I talked with a LFS and they will test my water for everything the next time I go in.

Thanks for all the advice and keep em coming.

I did manage to pull some algae today for a start...Craig.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13289867#post13289867 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by bolandess
Just a handy acclimation tool I built that works great...

1. Get about 10 ft of 1/4" vinyl tubing and a needle valve from Home Depot. They are right beside each other, ask someone for help selecting one if you have trouble.
2. Cut tubing about 8" from the end
3. Put the needle valve in-line with the tube and tighten the jam nuts down.
4. Put the longer end in the water of the tank and secure it (I duct taped it to the outside glass) and the other end in a bucket of some sort and secure that...
5. Add the fish/snails/inverts or whatever into the bucket IN THE WATER THAT THEY CAME IN.
6. Close the needle valve off 99% of the way and start a siphon...FYI it only takes a TAD of suction through the tube to start it unless you want a mouthful of tank water!! :D
7. Once the flow starts adjust the valve until you get about 2-3 drops a second for an hour
8. After the hour set the valve to drip so you barely see a space in between the drops...leave for an hour...
9. As the bucket fills up scoop out the water with whatever is clean and DISCARD THIS WATER
10. After that hour adjust the valve for a steady flow from the tank into the bucket...discarding water as it fills...I let this go for about 30-45 minutes. Usually at this point most of the water in the bucket is 100% tank water. Acclimation complete!

You can find the whole procedure with slide show on saltwaterfish.com about half way down the page on the left labelled "Acclimation"

Enjoy!

My LFS sells those pre-assembled. They come with a hard U-Tube that hangs on the tank.

Rule of thumb is 1 drop per second for several hours.

I put my snails/fish/corals/ect into a specimen container & then use the drip method until 2 hours has passed or the SG in the container matches that of the tank, whichever comes later.

Another way of acclimating snails is to lower the water level in the tank an inch or two & put the snails at the top & let them work their way into the tank at their own pace. I haven't tried it so I can't say how well it works.
---

On a side note: I've read that the turbo snails get pretty big (the ones at the LFS are bigger than a golf ball) & they can knock over corals & things if you are going to have a reef tank.
 
Assuming you figure out what you're doing wrong with all the stuff dying, I would recommend a phosphate reactor ASAP. You don't want that algae around and it will continue to thrive without one or lot's of work in water changes.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13294113#post13294113 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by prickles
Assuming you figure out what you're doing wrong with all the stuff dying, I would recommend a phosphate reactor ASAP. You don't want that algae around and it will continue to thrive without one or lot's of work in water changes.

I 2nd that. I'd also turn off the lights & cover the tank with a blanket for a few days to kill off some of that algae.
 
Thanks guys. I am in a waiting stage at the moment. Turbos still alive an I think well. Haven't seen the damsel assuming he is dead.
I have to wait a few days to get the water tested at the LFS as I work the same hours that they are open.

Should I turn the lights off now??

A buddy says if water tests O.K. and I try another fish and same result he recommends Take all rock out and scrub algae off. Then get rid of the sand and start again using cycle and new sand.

I would hate to loose any growth (other than algae) on the rocks i.e. fan worms and new corals starting.

What do you think??

Everyones Hero I am thinking of turning an extra seaclone into a reactor. i have seen an easy DIY. Will the algae make a mess of everything or just dissolve when I turn the lights out and blanket.

Thanks again for the help...Craig.
 
Hi before you do the lights out bit, try to harvest as much as you can, scrape the glass, pull the stuff off the rocks etc. When you cover the tank, I would point the power heads a bit more down wards in the hopes of blowing the dying algae off of the rocks, into the water coloum and then down your over flow. So hopefully the algae won't make too much of a mess. When it is time for lights on, be ready to do a water change to try to get some of the crap out of the water from the dying algae. If at lights on the algae is still there you could try to brush the rocks with a tooth brush to get some more off. It should be a bit easier to get off. If there is still quite a bit of algae do the lights off bit again. The fish and the snails will not be bothered by a period of darkness. As for the corals, it will depend on what kind you have. I did this and my soft corals were OK.
 
Thanks royaldude. My corals are just small frags cut off the live rock before I bought it so I wont be worrying to much. I just read sk8rs tips and will be trying the toothbrush method. Not to much time for me to work on it till next week though so I will run the lights a bit shorter times till then.

Thanks again...Craig.
 
I really have no idea what will happen when the algae starts to die off. I'd imagine it would start to break down & you'd get a lot of phosphates (assuming they've absorbed it) & ammonia as it decomposes.

There's just so much of it I don't know what to recommend other than going lights out to kill it off, doing water changes & getting your water quality in check in the process.

Then again I go against the grain of what many would consider "responsible reefkeeping" as I'm using well water for my tank. As much as people want to talk BS I've only had 2 things die on me. Those were 2 snails that had shells my hermit crab wanted.
 
EH

Yeah it might be a mess but can't be much worse. I will try and harvest as much as possible then try it.

Don't worry about being a rebel. My buddy set his up with tap and doesn't quarrantine a thing and his reef looks great. Sometimes there isn't any ryme or reason for things that happen in this hobby. Although it seems that everthing will eventually happen to me..lol
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13292907#post13292907 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Everyones Hero
My LFS sells those pre-assembled. They come with a hard U-Tube that hangs on the tank.

Rule of thumb is 1 drop per second for several hours.

I put my snails/fish/corals/ect into a specimen container & then use the drip method until 2 hours has passed or the SG in the container matches that of the tank, whichever comes later.

Another way of acclimating snails is to lower the water level in the tank an inch or two & put the snails at the top & let them work their way into the tank at their own pace. I haven't tried it so I can't say how well it works.
---

On a side note: I've read that the turbo snails get pretty big (the ones at the LFS are bigger than a golf ball) & they can knock over corals & things if you are going to have a reef tank.


I know you are not ready to drip acclimate anything at this point, but perhaps this will help someone else... You can really do this drip acclimation without any special equipment other than a 1/4" airline tube. Put the beginning of a really loose half-knot in the tubing. Use duct tape to tape the tubing so that one end of the tubing will stay submerged in the DT. Start a siphon from your display by sucking on one end of the tube (suck gently--it doesn't take much. Quickly slip a finger over the end of the tubing that was in your mouth and direct it into a SPARE bucket. Start tightening the knot in the tubing until reduces the flow so that you have a drop every couple of seconds. When you are satisfied with the rate. Direct the tube to the bucket that you have placed your livestock in, along with all of their original shipping water. You might even have to put a book or something under the edge of that bucket to tilt it if there wasn't enough shipping water in the bag. Remove the prop when you get a little more water in there.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13288759#post13288759 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by kokaneejr
Sorry about that.

Phosphate was probably.005 as the LFS said it was hardly detectable. Because of the algae I wanted to get a phosphte sponge but he said there was not enough phosphte to worry about.

Ammonia was undetectable by both of us.

I have not thested for copper as LFS said fish wouldn't be effected. maybe I should?

I acclimitised as per the info from this website. Floated 20 min. then small amout every 5 min for the next 20 then release.

Sk8r please explain a bit more and would copper kill fish and leave fans and algae alone. Off to take a few photos.

Thanks all...craig.

ok well a privous post you said good LFS or something along those lines no good fish store would say this. Change stores.
 
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