LouH
LouH
For several years I've had a 14"-16" deep remote deep sand bed (RDSB) in a 20 gallon Brute garbage can. I moved from southern California to northern Navada in October 2010. At that time I moved my tank/system in a U-Haul to its new location. I left the sand in the Brute garbage can and moved the whole thing without breaking it down. When I set up the system in its new home, I simply plumbed it (the RDSB) back into the system. Note that I attempted, with vairable success, to maintain salinity and temperature in each vessel containing live rock, sand, corals, fish, etc. I had one coral casuality and one cuke casualty (1 out of 5). When I got my cabinet assembled, put the tank put in place, and otherwise got the system up and running, I actually had very good growth for several months. This growth did slow down over time.
Fast forward to this morning. I decided to change out the Brute garbage can because over the years it has accumulated bulkheads of various sizes here and there as I experimented with circulation pumps, different plumbing configurations, etc. Having seen bulkheads fail radially at the flange, I decided that all of these unused bulkheads were liabilities, so it was time for a change.
I pulled the old Brute garbage can out of its home in the side cabinet and onto a thick visquine sheet that I had laid out on the floor. I had two plastic tubs on hand to receive sand as I scooped it from the old garbage can. To my amazement, at no point did I run into black patches of sand or detect any hint of sulfur small. The sand at the 16" inch (bottom) was just as clean as the sand on the surface. What does this mean? I've never been able to measure nitrates in my system, so I have to imagine that I'm getting de-nitrification somewhere. Is my RDSB doing anything, or is it simply clean? For comparison, I siphoned out some of the deeper sand (3") pockets in my main display, and it was nasty. Black spots in the sand were evident as was the familiar sulfur smell that accompanies anarobic microbial activity.
Notable facts include the use of sugar fine sand in the RDSB, and that the RDSB receives overflow water from a 20 gallon refugium, which recieves a slip stream from the sump's return line. I'd estimate the flow through the refugium and RDSB to be 1.5 gpm.
How do you guys interpret this observation?
Lou
Fast forward to this morning. I decided to change out the Brute garbage can because over the years it has accumulated bulkheads of various sizes here and there as I experimented with circulation pumps, different plumbing configurations, etc. Having seen bulkheads fail radially at the flange, I decided that all of these unused bulkheads were liabilities, so it was time for a change.
I pulled the old Brute garbage can out of its home in the side cabinet and onto a thick visquine sheet that I had laid out on the floor. I had two plastic tubs on hand to receive sand as I scooped it from the old garbage can. To my amazement, at no point did I run into black patches of sand or detect any hint of sulfur small. The sand at the 16" inch (bottom) was just as clean as the sand on the surface. What does this mean? I've never been able to measure nitrates in my system, so I have to imagine that I'm getting de-nitrification somewhere. Is my RDSB doing anything, or is it simply clean? For comparison, I siphoned out some of the deeper sand (3") pockets in my main display, and it was nasty. Black spots in the sand were evident as was the familiar sulfur smell that accompanies anarobic microbial activity.
Notable facts include the use of sugar fine sand in the RDSB, and that the RDSB receives overflow water from a 20 gallon refugium, which recieves a slip stream from the sump's return line. I'd estimate the flow through the refugium and RDSB to be 1.5 gpm.
How do you guys interpret this observation?
Lou