Yes, that guy is 100% full of BS and makes things up has he goes and/or tends to explain/justify his opinions and observations with missaplied science and logic. He contradicts how own explanations, sometimes several times in a single thread.
BUT...don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. Just because one guy has convinced a large following that ATS are magic, does not mean they are BAD.
I didn't say they were bad because one guy convinced a large following that ATS's are magic. They are once again popular because of what he did. It is the biology of the organisms that live on ATS's that make them "BAD".
An ATS offers a viable method for nutrient export that can replace or compliment other methods. It is a filtration tool, not magic.
What method can ATS's "replace"? That sounds like more of the magic, voodoo stuff Mr. S. Monica was talking about. Like when he said ATS's replace protein skimmers.
That may be your opinion, but I don't see any evidence for such a claim.
Read back through some of the older literature for the hobby. ATS's were quite popular back in the day. Myself and many others ran them. As hobbyists gained a better understanding of biology, chemistry, and made advancements in technology, most ATS's found their way to the garbage heap. Now they are once again popular. To me, that's a step backwards.
In fact, I know of at least (3) tanks (local club members) that utilize ATS systems (the dump tray type) and are easily tank of the month material.
No disrespect intended, but that shows us, or proves nothing. I call that rubber ducky science. If I float a rubber ducky in my tank, and the tank does well, should everyone run out and buy a rubber ducky because it worked so well in my system?????? That's ridiculous, right????? Well, it's no more ridiculous than saying a tank did well while running an ATS, so ATS's work well, and we should all run out and buy one. We should look to science to determine how something is going to effect our systems. Not someone else's system.
We can do all kinds of bad stuff to our systems and still make them "successful". I can buy liquid fertilizer, loaded with nitrogen and phosphorous, hook it up to a dosing pump, and dose it into my tank, and still maintain a beautiful and successful system. That doesn't mean dosing nitrogen and phosphorus to your tank is a good idea, or beneficial.
The fact that someone ran a successful system while running a ATS tells us nothing about how an ATS will effect a system. It is meaningless.
One of those systems was taken down when the owner decided to leave the hobby. The ATS is now on my system and is a vast improvement over my (now offline) refugium. I had a very high nitrate concentration (25-50) for over a year (very efficient skimmer, water changes, refugium) and crippling phosphates. Replacing the refugium with the ATS (everything else staying the same), nitrate is 0 a and has stayed there for 6 months and phosphates have dropped but still require other export means.
Note that taking the refugium offline for 2 months DID cause nitrates to slightly rise. Adding the ATS dropped then to 0. My coral looks better and my water parameters are more stable (PH) than I had with the refufium (also reverse photo period).
If I were to remove the typical fuge from an established system, I' wouldn't be surprised to see a temporary spike in nitrate. Most people design their fuge to house anaerobic areas. Once this anaerobic area is removed, it would take time for the microbial population in the anaerobic areas of the display to increase population and bring nitrates back down.
What you're describing above indicates that, in your system, the ATS may not be as bad as the fuge you were running. It does not show that the ATS is beneficial to your system. What would happen if you took the ATS off line, removed the vast majority of rotting organic matter (detritus) from the system, carried out routine maintenance, and simply kept the system clean? I'd be willing to bet that many of your headaches would go away. Like the phosphate problem in your 7 year old system.
DSBs? I don't have an opinion but see merit to both sides of the debate and long term success on both sides.
That is a totally different subject, but one I would never suggest to someone that wants a heavily stocked SPS tank.
Peace
EC:thumbsup: