143gadgets
New member
You make a very interesting point when you talk about the kent products. What were your dosing habits? Did u just follow the instructions on each bottle?
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11378100#post11378100 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
That is true... ethanol dosing seems to be 1/2 of what needs to happen. That being said, it looks like Ultralith is exactly the same as Zeo, but about 30% less. Maybe some of the 'specialty' products vary between systems, but the core system seems the same. Quality may vary though, who knows. I think I just have to pick one and try it.
The thing that gets me is that Im sure there already exists a US parallel to the Zeo/Ultralith or even Prodobio systems. I was looking at old bottles of KENT products I have on the shelf (when I was a noob, I bought every KENT bottled suppliment around and still have them all sitting around) Take for instance, the Ultralth 'Ultra Organic' suppliment... Iron, Potassium, Iodide, and other things I cant remember (the bottle is downstairs if I really want to check). Well, look at KENT Coral-Vite or Essential Elements... they contain Iron, Mg, Molybdenum, Manganese, Potassium. One of the critical components of Zeo is the 'amino acids' and 'vitamins'... look at KENT Coral Accel, it has crude protein, crude fat, crude fiber, iodine, asorbic acid, and vitamin A. Heck, Coral-Vite has B-1, B-6, B-12, Vitamin A, Asorbic acid as well as what I mentioned before.
Some of the products that prodobio sports are similar to this:
www.microbelift.com ,or one of the many other 'cycle' style bacterial suppliments that companies like Aquarium Pharmaceuticals offers (Stress Zyme: a biological filtration booster).
My tank was running ethanol until the point I think I stripped some elements out 100%. My iodate level is what got me the most... 0? If thats not a false reading on Salifert's behalf. But here is something funny... those corals I was concerned with because they looked faded and that whorling cap that was bleaching in spots... well, I added a bunch of Tech-I that I had laying around to boost Iodine, and then started dumping in those KENT chemicals I had laying around. Coral Accel, Essential Elements, Strontium/Moly, Coral-Vite, etc...
Yesterday I noticed something in the evening... a few of my corals that were doing the 'pastel thing' were dark again!
I think the real value of a 'system' like Zeo or Ultralith is in the fact that they have a researched 'method' and have a system. KENT, or one of the other major US names that makes 'suppliments' just doesnt have a system really... not in the same respect as Zeo. They COULD, and it might HELP THEM GREATLY as well as the consumer so they know what to buy.... but they dont. I cant tell you how many times I have heard some n00b talk about how the LFS guy said that their corals arent coloring in well or dying because their calcium/alkalinity was low, and so they sold them 'Essential Elements' to correct the problem...lol. Im sure KENT or someone like them could come up with what the Zeo-rocks are (heck, we do have mineral/miracle mud... I wonder how similar they are in effect), and make a $50 phosban reactor that has a stirring mechanism on it to stir zeolites... (or just use a phos reactor, and simply pick it up and shake the whole thing once a day rather than use the 'plunger')
Im not saying they are all the same quality, or that one poduct equals another 100%... the amounts might be off in comparison. But I just find it funny that these 'ultra expensive' systems may already have a low-price counterpart. I can tell you one thing... rather than dose some fancy product for potassium, I can just go to the lab supply and pick up pure potassium, potassium iodide, and potassium chloride and have my own fun for cheap.
So for me, I see the value. If I was to suggest to a noob what suppliments to look into, I would rather tell them to try a zeo or ultralith system that is spelled out for them rather than 'try some KENT products and see what works for you' or 'you need a phosban reactor'. To me, it just makes sense to invest the money in something that is a complete system with instructions, support, and guides rather than waste money on chemicals that you may or may not need. If I add up all the KENT bottles I have, Im sure its over $200 in chromaplex, zooplex, phytoplex, microvert food, Tech-I, Tech-M, Strontium, Essential Elements, Coral Accel, Coral-Vite, etc. etc. Or, I could pick up a liter of zeolith stones, and the other 3 'basic 4' for the the same if not less in a package and be on my way... you know?
I was looking at the Prodobio in the new MD catalog last night... dont think Ill bother with that though. Unless its a new tank, the only things I would use are the 5 things included in the 'Biokit Reef' (DIGEST, BIOPTIM, REEF BOOSTER, and STRONTI+ and IODI+). Of those, I bet the Digest is alot like one of the 'biological cleaning' products already out there in a bottle like Stress Zyme, Bioptim is similar to vodka dosing, and booster is just like Coral-Accel, Coral-Vite, or Essential Elements. And Stronti and Iodi? I think I can suppliment those w/o needing a fancy vial to do so... they are just basic elements after all. KENT Strontium&Molybdenum anyone? Tech-I/Super Iodine anyone? Heck, pure potassium iodide would do it just as well.
I like the idea of a reactor that cultivates bacterial plankton and such though... as long as it doesnt turn my corals pastel...lol.