N/P reducing pellets (solid vodka dosing)

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The cause of low pH in systems is due to a high level of carbon dioxide. That can be due to a number of causes. The most common is a high level of carbon dioxide in the room, due to people or pets breathing. :) Sometimes, tanks have poor aeration, which allows carbon dioxide to build up in the water column. Better aeration, such as a skimmer or better circulation, can improve the pH by outgassing carbon dioxide. Aeration doesn't refer just to oxygen. It includes all the components in the air: nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, etc. We tend to focus on carbon dioxide and oxygen because they're the active components in our tanks, for the most part.
 
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I'm with you. I would love to know why some situations "don't" work more than I'd like to know how the other ones do. If I had used them and all worked out great then I wouldn't be as pessimistic about these random non-working sitiuations. But I am cause they don't work for me.
not to hijack...but the rice that I'm now using has yet to give any real results either. Only difference is that the rice is making my skimmer work well at pulling out nasty gunk. BP's never did...

so the question is weather or not ANY of these methods will work in my tank. And if not, then what is wrong with my system that inhibits the use of solid dosing.

what priduct should I try next. :P

I find it quite interesting that you cannot get any reaction from the BP's.

My apologies if you stated this info prior, but I've done my best to read this entire thread and don't recall you stating info pertaining to any of my following questions.

Do you use ozone injection??

Do you use UV sterilization??

Have you tried any other carbon source dosing for bacterial proliferation?? If so, was it effective at maintaining nutrient levels??

Were you dosing anything else in the vacinity of the BP reactor intake (kalk, alk supplement, or anything else that would make a significant impact on the water chemistry entering the reactor)????

What are your most recent NO3 and PO4 readings and what test kit/method??

Are you growing any macroalgea??

How much nuisance algea growth do you have in the tank??

Is your tank exhibiting signs of high nitrates (browned corals, lots of nuisance algea, limited polyp ext from your corals, any other coral irritation, etc....)???

I'm sure there's some reason your not getting an effective response, we just need to pin point the issue.

Jeremy
 
ozone...no

uv........no

any other carbon dosing....no, never till the BP

nothing was ever dosed anywhere near the reactor intake.

current levels (levels when I quit) NO3 15ppm PO4 0ppm. NO3 was at 80ppm when I started, but that was brought down to 10-15 through water changes.

not growing macro...

nuisance algae is not high...but that is a matter of opinion. I have a foxface that keeps my rocks clean enough, but he always leaves a littlt grass to eat tomorrow. ;) but the point is that I am not plagued with HA.

he corals look better than ever now that I got my NO3 from 80 to almost 10. Everything looks great. The reason I want to have the pellets work is so that I don't have to do 50% water changes. I'd rather do 10%.

if you need to know more just ask...
 
ozone...no

uv........no

any other carbon dosing....no, never till the BP

nothing was ever dosed anywhere near the reactor intake.

current levels (levels when I quit) NO3 15ppm PO4 0ppm. NO3 was at 80ppm when I started, but that was brought down to 10-15 through water changes.

not growing macro...

nuisance algae is not high...but that is a matter of opinion. I have a foxface that keeps my rocks clean enough, but he always leaves a littlt grass to eat tomorrow. ;) but the point is that I am not plagued with HA.

he corals look better than ever now that I got my NO3 from 80 to almost 10. Everything looks great. The reason I want to have the pellets work is so that I don't have to do 50% water changes. I'd rather do 10%.

if you need to know more just ask...

If you really have the feeling that they don't work , i would try one other trick for 2 or 3 weeks depending on the results.
I did this while using BP's and having still having cyano problems while nitrates and phosphates where zero.

Dose some vinegar every day begining with 2ml/25 g this for 2 days then upping it with 2 ml/25g every 2 days untill you are dosing 10 ml/25 g still with the BP in service and see what happens if they drop (nitrates).
Would go on doing this until they are less then 1 ppm , and then i would gradualy decreasse vinegar back in one or two weeks to zero still checking nitrates offcorse.

-If nitrates go back up , but hold steady to a lower level as they are now (say 5 or 10 ppm's) you could add some extra BP's.

-If nitrates don't drop even after vinegar cure , you have to seek the answer some where else then with the BP's then something else is leeching into the system , i think.

-if nitrates keep getting up after you stoped the vinegar cure , i would start dosing vinegar again , if it's the only way to bring them down in your system
you have to go for that way .

Hopefully this will work for you ... :)
and keep posting your findings , toghether we will solve this problem...

greetingzz tntneon :)
 
You're right. Guess it was a bacterial bloom and the dropping pH was the result of all this stuff being metabolized?

It's a new tank, with dry sand and dry rock so I added Fritz Bacteria to get it cycling.
It was just at the tail end of cycling when I added the pellets.
My return pump broke and I borrowed the skimmer's pump to use as return pump (it's an Elos so just uses a regular pump, not needlewheel) thinking that the pellets wouldn't kick in for a week or two and I'd have the pump replaced by then.

Added pellet reactor to the set up on July 26

Took this picture on July 27
215tank072710.jpg


Tested on the 28th and Nitrates had already dropped!

Major cloud on the 29th and pH plummeting (down from 7.9)
215tank072910.jpg


rkl072910.jpg


Added skimmer pump on the 29th and took this picture on the morning of July 30th:
215tank073010.jpg

pH rising a little bit:
rkl073010.jpg
 
If you really have the feeling that they don't work , i would try one other trick for 2 or 3 weeks depending on the results.
I did this while using BP's and having still having cyano problems while nitrates and phosphates where zero.

Dose some vinegar every day begining with 2ml/25 g this for 2 days then upping it with 2 ml/25g every 2 days untill you are dosing 10 ml/25 g still with the BP in service and see what happens if they drop (nitrates).
Would go on doing this until they are less then 1 ppm , and then i would gradualy decreasse vinegar back in one or two weeks to zero still checking nitrates offcorse.

-If nitrates go back up , but hold steady to a lower level as they are now (say 5 or 10 ppm's) you could add some extra BP's.

-If nitrates don't drop even after vinegar cure , you have to seek the answer some where else then with the BP's then something else is leeching into the system , i think.

-if nitrates keep getting up after you stoped the vinegar cure , i would start dosing vinegar again , if it's the only way to bring them down in your system
you have to go for that way .

Hopefully this will work for you ... :)
and keep posting your findings , toghether we will solve this problem...

greetingzz tntneon :)

Thanks for the input tntneon. I agree that Dave should experiment with some bacterial proliferation through carbon source dosing. Although I'm not familiar with vinegar dosing in great detail, it seems your dosing recommendations are very high and could be dangerous.

Dave.

Below is a great article about vodka dosing and gives very precise dosing instruction to help limit any uneccesary stress as the process is implemented.

http://www.reefkeeping.com/issues/2008-08/nftt/index.php

If I were in your situation I would start with some vodka dosing and get a productive regimen established. If you really want to continue trying to manage your nutrients with BP's then I would then try to implement the use of the BP's and slowly wean off the vodka. Just my thoughts on what I would try next if I were in your situation.

How long did you run the BP's Dave??

Although I don't think it's necessary, did you try jump starting the process with any bacterial addative (mb7, zeobak, etc...)??

Are you continuing to need to do significant water changes to keep the nitrates low??

Jeremy
 
Pellets, ZEO, Ozone.

Pellets, ZEO, Ozone.

I am on 5th week of 1.25 l of pellets, I ran .25 as a test starting 5/21.

At time of start I was a year into ZEO. I have 2 mixed tanks with 8 big fish, sps, lps, softies and some nonphotos, chilie, Sun, ect. 300 gallons plus, 8 years setup. I've been struggling to keep sps alive consistantly. My current status is all cyno, GHA and Purple fuzzy algae is slowly going away. The real improvement kicked in when I upped the level of pellets.

Currently I am using the following:

NP pellets
ZEOvites 1.5 l ZEO and Brightwell
Microbac7 10 drops every day or two
ZEObac 15 drops on sunday
around 2 liters of carbon
Ozone - in isolated subsystem, carbon filtered on return
A couple of reactors and old sulfur filters with old ZEOrocks and a tad of Sulfur
Micro bags
Orca 250 skimmer
Daily small water changes using PF controller.
AA, AALP, CV 1 or 2 time a week (I use a leather corals and mushrooms as visual of when water is "too" clean)
K+ if Monti caps look faded.
Lowered salinity from 1.026 to 1.024/23. Monti and Stylopora type corals seem to not like high salinity or sudden swings.

I stopped using ZEOstart2 completly 2 weeks ago after slow reduction.
I feed 10 frozen cubes a day, cut way back on powdered coral food (seemed to cause cyno)
I also reduced hours of blue light by 40% and 100% on big and small tank. (cyno seems to like blue light) Carbon dosing also seems to fuel cyno.


This has been a very interesting and frustrating experience. Consistancy is key, I tended to over fix which caused new issues. Additionally I like to have big fish and LPS, they eat alot. I would get tank in line then over feed a week or two later and boom sps crash.

Pictures coming, I purchased a Marco lens yesterday!

Tony

:bounce3::bounce3::bounce2::bounce2::bounce1:
 
I dosed MB7 twice. (thanks DJreef) and had zero change. I also used the BP for 15 weeks without them ever working. After 15 weeks I switched to rice. Finally my skimmer is working great again. No other change in flow and no additional additives. Just rice instead of BP.

if doseing more vsv were required then I wish I had known at the start, that way I would have never bought the BP. It's false advertising to buy the pellets and then have people tell you after the fact that they don't work unless you add MORE STUFF to the tank. There was no mention of needing to do that when I bought them. The product should have worked as advertised. It didn't.
 
Dave - I am odd man out adding bacteria, most guys don't. Also I believe if your PO4 is zero, pellets won't lower NO3. (That is why I run sulfur reactor) I suspect in the long run PO4 will be higher of 2, GFO will take care of that.

Tell me about the rice, same idea? Bacteria eating NO3 and PO4 in reactor?
 
you're deffinatly NOT the odd man out. Plenty of people have dosed "something" weather it be MB7, vodka, sugar, vinegar, some form of zeo, or whatever...but people have dosed. They have either dosed before using BP, while using BP, or after they started BP. From what I recal reading in this whole thread, people like me that have NEVER dosed are the odd men out. I didn't dose anything till week 1d and 15 and then I stoped using BP.

I too am now starting to believe that it's a PO4 problem. I have none. If I don't get any then I suspect that I will not be able to reduce NO3 in any easy way other than doing more WC.

rice is the same idea...only a lot cheaper than a bag of BP.
 
Try some seachem de-nitrator, liverock or sulfur reactor. Anything with slow drip will help reduce NO3. Just smell effluient, (spelling?) if it smells like rotting eggs increase drip.

I say I am odd man out because I plan on not stopping bacteria, rocks and Ozone.

I am keeping ZEO rocks for food source and a bit of insurance!

Any old white rice will work?

Thanks
 
Dave.

I don't think starting a carbon source regimen is prior to running BP's is "required" for the BP's to work. The reason I suggested the vodka dosing was to see if you could get any sort of bacterial proliferation when dosing a carbon source. If you did then I would slowly convert the carbon source to being just the BP's to see if they begin to function as a viable carbon source. If you get good results from vodka dosing and switching to BP's while weaning off the vodka dosing allows your nitrates or po4 to rise, then I'd say it's pretty clear the issue is with the BP's. If you started vodka dosing and still got no reaction or decrease in nitrates then I'd look further into some other issue like a lack of PO4, however, I wouldn't too be quick to say you don't have enough po4 to induce bacterial growth becuase the foods we feed contain a lot of po4.

If you run GFO you could stop that and see if an increase in po4 makes any difference.

Jeremy
 
hey all

i just started up my nextreef xl reactor... a few questions...

my tank is 150 gallons

i am using .5 liter of the new np pellets... am i using the correct amount?

i noticed its clumping i guess with air... kind of strange looking is this normal?

anything special i should be doing other then pumping it back to the skimmer intake?

what should i expect next?
 
I think the lack of PO4 is the problem in a lot of these cases of bp not reducing nitrate. Its a balancing act. You have to have some PO4 for the bacteria to proliferate. I think I have this problem so I am gonna bite the bullet and turn off GFO. Hopefully this does'nt bite me in the a**.
 
You could try backing off the GFO slowly, rather than a sudden change. It might be less of a shock that way. Hard to say, though.
 
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