I usually do the same as mel. If something is really covered in coraline, you could always lay the tank on it's side and let it soak in the vinegar for awhile. You can only do one side at a time like this, but it will save some work.
Muriatic acid
That won't damage the silicone at all?
thinking i can acid clean the rocks that i been collecting inside these tanks as well![]()
Thanks for the reminderRemember: Add acid to water when diluting, not the other way around!
Thanks for the advice, going to try 10:1, if not strong enough then 5:1, this acid stuff sorta scares me! u got me thinking, I have more than just rocks, some sorta branching stuff, like dead corals... Acid bath them as well?If, by "rocks" you mean typical live rock - wet or dry - the acid will dissolve it! Use at a very low concentration and test on a small piece first.
Thanks for the details TMZ, i have the tanks setup in the garage so I am concern with the fumes, I will leave the garage door open for several hours after pouring in the acid, is this when its most dangerous? What happens when I shut the garage at night?Muriatic acid is the cheapest and easiest. Put the tank outside fill it with water add the acid. I used a quart of so for a 55 g tank . Let it sit overnight . Dump it and hose it out. You may need to add more acid than I used depending on the crud in the tank. No it wont hurt silicone. Careful , don't splash yourself with the acid it will burn you. All it does is drop the ph to a point where the calcium carbonate dissolves.
oh this is getting good, I will do the 50% bleach bath then the acid bathPS: if you are worried about the acidity of the water when you are done you can add some clcium hydroxide( kalk) , sodium hydroxide(lye) or baked baking soda ( carbonate) or even unbaked baking soda (bicarbonate)to neutralize it.
The calcium carbonate rocks may have organics and precipitants. I clean them with a bath in bleach at about 50% plain Chlorox and water for about 2hours, followed by a rinse with fresh water.This destroys the organics by oxidizing them.
Then an acid bath( muriatic acid at roughly 1 part to ten parts fresh water)for a couple of hours. The acid bath will dissolve calcium carbonate as Willie noted. It ewill also neutralize the oxidants left over from the bleach bath. In effect ithe acid dissolves the top layer of live rock which is mainly calcium carbonate . A rinse removes the dissolved material and everything it may hold including metals like copper and PO4 sticking to the rock. Dry it out and you have clean dry rock.