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Personally, I just add a bit of fish food.
I personally don't bother with bacterial supplements.
Me too.
Personally, I just add a bit of fish food.
I personally don't bother with bacterial supplements.
I use Ace janitorial strength ammonia cleaner. It's 10% and has no surficants or perfumes and costs like $3 for a quart. I ground through the numbers a while back and it worked out to within measuring error that 1 ml of cleaner raises 5 gal of salt water to 5 ppm NH3.
So do you add this once and forget it or do you monitor and dose daily to keep this level until the bacteria takes over and depletes the ammonia levels in a certain timeframe?
I'd probably just add some once and then wait. There's no way to create a useful formula for dosing ammonia into a tank. I might make sure I got a measurable amount of ammonia, say 0,5 ppm, and call it good enough. For many rock sources, adding ammonia is unnecessary due to the organic debris on the rock, but the ammonia itself can't hurt anything.
You have to know if there any additives to the ammonia, like detergents, scents, etc.
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I used the calculator to gauge to 5ppm. I went 2 ml less (7.5 ml) and tested 2 hrs later...4 ppm. I plan on testing each day and adjust the ammonia dose accordingly every two days. I acid bath'd my pukani rock and pressure washed it thoroughly. I realize you can't get everything but it was clean and wasn't sure I'd have much organic, decaying matter. Followed up with running RO water in tank with rock through system...it stayed crystal clear. I appreciate the help, advice and knowledge.
I agree that a calculator can do that, but my comment was more directed to some target levels that were posted.Actually, the calculator is just give some idea of how much you will adding to the system to get to a certain PPM.
I agree that a calculator can do that, but my comment was more directed to some target levels that were posted.
We used to use household ammonia in the 70's when we didn't want to loose a fish to cycle (no live rock availible then). I even remember one guy claiming to take a leak in his tank. But the cycle is about more than ammonia, other forms or waste also need to be broken down. We can test for ammonia easily, but the cycle is not limited to it. If you really want a creatureless cycle, I support the fish food suggestion over ammonia. I always got another "mini-cycle" later when adding fish.
We used to use household ammonia in the 70's when we didn't want to loose a fish to cycle (no live rock availible then). I even remember one guy claiming to take a leak in his tank. But the cycle is about more than ammonia, other forms or waste also need to be broken down. We can test for ammonia easily, but the cycle is not limited to it. If you really want a creatureless cycle, I support the fish food suggestion over ammonia. I always got another "mini-cycle" later when adding fish.
Many people will dose once and then that's it, which is tantamount to doing nothing at all.
I would agree with this, but not related to the nitrogen cycle. I agree because there are many people who have zero physical filtration and not much in the way of a cleaning schedule. The food and detritus accumulate into low oxygen areas where they do not get broken down, clog the overall biofilter and the tank eventually crashes every couple years with great surprise to the hobbyist.
Keithshay again...please explain...lol. what does this mean ?