Why does increasing the system’s volume not also increase the carbon dosing proportionally? Why is the maximum dose for a 25 gallon system 61 mL and a 1000 gallon system 124 mL? What am I missing?
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The numbers are based on the vodka dosing chart, which are intended to be very conservative. The reasoning behind the lower proportions for larger tanks might be based on the cost or difficulty of water changes or other difficulties in dealing with a problem. You'd need to contact the authors to be sure, but I certainly would be more leery of larger doses in a larger and more expensive system that's much harder to handle. A few 30% water changes in a 29g system costs very little and the time and effort required is trivial. I have never managed a larger system, so I can't comment much. You could ask in the large tank forum.
I'd guess it may scale more like surface area than system volume, since bacteria will be denser at surfaces than in water column itself.
Just a guess though.
I think it's quite possible that the chart is "wrong" for some value of wrong. As far as we can tell, it's very conservative, and much larger doses generally seem to be safe. That definitely could be even more true for the larger tanks.Another possibility is that the author of the vodka dosing chart made a mistake. For now concentrate on the vinegar dosing chart which is derived from the vodka (ethanol) dosing chart.
You might be correct about it being a math error. That'd be funny. All the years I thought it was an excess of caution.If you convert mL of vinegar dosed to ppm acetic acid in the aquarium, the first two weeks for the 25 and 1000 gallon columns are the same, 0.43 and .87 ppm, respectively. This is as it should be. The incremental changes to the dose is where the author mistakenly added a constant increment across all columns (system sizes). That math error gives 33 ppm acetic acid for a 25 gallon system and 1.7 ppm acetic acid for a 1000 gallon system by week seventeen.
I agree that ethanol is a higher energy source per unit of carbon than vinegar. Vinegar basically is oxidized ethanol, after all. I don't know whether the the extra energy added causes more pests. A lot of the pests that seem to show up can use photosynthesis, as well, which muddies the issue of energy requirements somewhat.A minor point also to consider. Acetic acid and ethanol are not strictly interchangeable for dosing. While they both have two carbons, the energy derived from ethanol is higher. Acetic acid is a poorer energy source than ethanol and will require higher amounts than vodka. I have no idea at this point whether this fat would be discernible in a typical hobby aquarium, but it possibly addresses the nuisance organism growth difference, iffy as that topic is.
I think it's quite possible that the chart is "wrong" for some value of wrong
It's the daily dose.Is the dosage in that chart weekly or per day for that week?
It's the daily dose.
Continued reading today and the answer to one of my questions, who created the table or at least the math: Jorg Kokott. So far, I haven't found his article nor the rationale behind the seemingly odd dosing scale up. Was it purely empirical?
Back to reading...
I think that'd be a reasonable experiment to try. Many tanks start seeing bacterial buildups at some point, though, so I'd watch the tank.
27ml would be in week 8, by the middle of the table.
At 27ml I'm still not seeing any noticeable change in look (corals, fish, etc., cyano, algae) and definitely no bloom. No change in Nitrate, Phosphate. MAYBE less green algae, which was already very much under control.