This is new to me...
This is new to me...
I might have missed the departure from the original thought that one cannot overdose this system (after target/trace levels have been reached), however in the context presented I can see the direction you're headed.
In my particular situation, and perhaps due to the fact that my prototype system was drastically under-maintained for for years before the current rehabilitation effort, I'm finding that PO4 is a hek of a lot more difficult to maintain at trace levels than Nitrate. I've successfully reached 0ppm nitrates weeks ago, while my phosphates still remain at 0.3 - 0.5....
Possibly, mine is a combination of PO4 leaching back out from the liverock; and generous feeding (frozen food in particular); however, I'd be interested to hear more about the over-dosing possibility... In my simplified view, I would have just continued to be generous with the feeding, and I was not sure that 0 nitrate would be that detrimental. Another note to add is that it seems that my GHA cycle has finally run its course, perhaps now, all of that latent phos will begin to reach trace levels without going overboard with GFO as I have in addition to the pellets employed... Anyway just my two sense.. Will continue to keep an eye on things and see what happens.
Just wanted to ask because this is the first I've heard about too much pellets being a problem beyond the previously discussed risk of shocking an old system with too fast a drop in levels.
Regards,
Sheldon
This is new to me...
The idea is the bio beads will reduce phosphate and nitrate.
Too much of a good thing could potentially strip the phosphate down
to a true ZERO and you do nottttttttttt want ZERO phosphate.....the
animals need *some* phosphate just not much......
The whole thing to me is a crap shoot! The main thing is to continue to
monitor your system and personally I use 1/2 of what is recommended....
I do not want to overshoot...and then..if I will gradually work that up
to 100% of recommendation IFFFFFF I need to...which I might NOT need
to because possibly 1/2 the recommended amount will get me to the phosphate level that I want.... everyone talks about .03 phosphate but
I just watched a video of my favorite reefer David Saxby and he does not
allow his phosphate to get below .015 level..and the number he stated
is alotttttt higher then the .03 everyone seems to aim for.....So is he wrong????? I think not!
Again..crap shoot.....you like rolling dice? hahaha
Sorry..I am not a pro...just my opinion
Take it if it helps you in any way or ignore it otherwise...
have super day
Tim
In theory, the extra pellets might be capable of driving the nutrients low enough to cause problems. If you want to increase the amount, I'd say just add more pellets gradually, and watch for signs of trouble.
I might have missed the departure from the original thought that one cannot overdose this system (after target/trace levels have been reached), however in the context presented I can see the direction you're headed.
In my particular situation, and perhaps due to the fact that my prototype system was drastically under-maintained for for years before the current rehabilitation effort, I'm finding that PO4 is a hek of a lot more difficult to maintain at trace levels than Nitrate. I've successfully reached 0ppm nitrates weeks ago, while my phosphates still remain at 0.3 - 0.5....
Possibly, mine is a combination of PO4 leaching back out from the liverock; and generous feeding (frozen food in particular); however, I'd be interested to hear more about the over-dosing possibility... In my simplified view, I would have just continued to be generous with the feeding, and I was not sure that 0 nitrate would be that detrimental. Another note to add is that it seems that my GHA cycle has finally run its course, perhaps now, all of that latent phos will begin to reach trace levels without going overboard with GFO as I have in addition to the pellets employed... Anyway just my two sense.. Will continue to keep an eye on things and see what happens.
Just wanted to ask because this is the first I've heard about too much pellets being a problem beyond the previously discussed risk of shocking an old system with too fast a drop in levels.
Regards,
Sheldon