Should I be vacuuming my sand to remove nitrates?

If there is detritus collecting anywhere it can be very useful. It's also a good way to get rid of cyanobacteria if it is there.

I have had the same Python Siphon for almost 30 years and still use it regularly, although nowhere near as much as I used to when my tank was a messy Fish Only. In theory, at least, a well balanced reef tank shouldn't need to be siphoned. A vital job of your CUC is to help keep it stirred up.
 
No, very doubtful vacuuming will have any affect. About 1/2 of us do not vacum our sand and the others, who are all probably ocd, 1/2 do.
 
If I told you that I've never vacuumed my sand bed and I have had nitrate problems that I've solved by simply doing water changes does that tell you anything?

You will find that people either do or don't and no one really has any proof that its needed or beneficial..
 
I do it otherwise crud collects on the sand and I think it looks ugly.

I can’t tell if it has any affect on nitrates.
 
If so, do I use the same method as in freshwater...with a standard siphon?

You might be better off just stirring up your sand bed with a small powerhead every now & then right before a water change. Remove 10-20% of the water and run a filter sock until the water clears up. The siphon will work though don't get me wrong, but your kind of limited by the rock structure and it's amazing what can accumulate under/behind your rocks sometimes. A powerhead can get to those nooks & crannies. Also, you won't be removing some of the beneficial micro fauna that live within your substrate.
Just something to think about. GL.
 
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Vacuum it. Look at what comes out. Decide once you see it. I vacuum and will continue to do so.
 
I lightly vacuum and stir it up during a water change. I've done both vacuuming and not touching it. When I took the "œnot touch it" method, I created a time bomb. It eventually collected a huge amount of detritus. Now I keep an inch or less of sand and keep it stirred up with snails and stir it and lightly siphon during water changes. It's been a much better method for me. I'm not sure about nitrates, but I certainly have less detritus.
 
I would not. Generally it is not good to disturb the anoxic layers of sand.

I think it depends on how deep your sand bed is and if you keep it stirred up. If you have a deeper layer of sand and have never touched it, yeah, it's probably gonna be a bad time. I have a shallow bed and have ceriths and nassarius snails that help keep it stirred up then i stir it up and siphon lightly once a week. That's worked best for me but this is one of those topics that you're gonna get a lot of different opinions on. I've also had a deeper sand bed that I never touched and it got loaded with detritus and eventually I had a ton of cyano and other problems. That probably would have gone better had I used some sand stirring critters, though.
 
The sand always gets sucked up if I go anywhere near the bottom? 30 gallon running on just a fluval 206, so doing frequent changes.
 
Should I be vacuuming my sand to remove nitrates?

Well, it depends on grain size and what your using to suck up the water. If your using super fine sand, I'm not sure you'll be able to siphon it. I'm using Fiji pink and feel like if it was any smaller it'd be really hard to siphon. I bought one of these recently which works well, I just have to take it easy and lightly siphon:

Genuine TERAPUMP Aquarium Cleaner Aquarium Fish Tank Gravel Sand Cleaner with Long Nozzle N Water Flow Controller - BPA Free (model: TRFTCLN) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B011DDJZ9Y?ref=yo_pop_ma_swf

It works fairly well but I'll still suck up some sand if I get too aggressive.

What I generally do is gently stir up the sand, just rake across it and the detritus usually stays on top or in the water column. I have a couple of areas where detritus gets trapped so I gently turkey bast those areas as well as my LR and again, the detritus stays on top of the sand or in the water column. Once I've done that, I'll siphon the sand lightly. I just keep an eye on it and if it starts sucking up too much sand, I back off for a bit. TBH, I don't mind sucking a small amount of the sand bed out every water change. Eventually, it'll get low enough and I'll just add more sand. I've always thought that "œold tank syndrome" is likely caused by sand and rock absorbing phosphates and other stuff over time until it can't, then it releases it back into the tank. So I try to keep my rock and sand as clean as possible. I feel like detritus is one of your worst enemies in a reef tank so I try to get out as much as possible. I kinda regret adding sand to my latest build even though I love the look and hate the look of BB, but it would be so much easier to suck out detritus in a BB or false bottom tank!

If you are using super fine sand, I'd just lightly stir or take across it, then siphon right above it. Just find the sweet spot where you're sucking up the detritus that's laying on the sand but not the sand itself. Your other option would be to stir the hell out of it and just siphon it out of the water column and then turn your pump back on and send the rest into your sump to be caught by a filter sock or similar and your skimmer. I do this every once and a while too and just create a detritus snow storm.
 
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If you put a screen between two layers of substrate, you can both, vacuuming the "top" layer, and leave the bottom alone ( as Tripod1504 points out)

If you then leave 2" of free water under this and create a negative pressure in this area, the water will "fall through" this media and be recirculated into the column.

A cheap mans sump!
 
If you put a screen between two layers of substrate, you can both, vacuuming the "top" layer, and leave the bottom alone ( as Tripod1504 points out)

If you then leave 2" of free water under this and create a negative pressure in this area, the water will "fall through" this media and be recirculated into the column.

A cheap mans sump!

That sounds kind of like a plenum(s?).
 
True!
But works great!
Switched for my sump 10 years ago now.
Excluding place for equipment, the concepts are very similar...
 
I keep a deep sand bed, and have sand sifting snails and a goby. I never clean my sand, it stays pretty clean but even if it has detritus on it, I don't try to clean it. I've never noticed any problems with nitrates.
 
sand sifting starfish, snails, goby. Never cleaned the sand. Then one day after 5 years, did a good vacuuming and lost all the fish to Mycobacteria (based on necropsy) within 1 week.
Pathologist felt that the bacteria had likely been in the sand bed all along and massive amounts were released into the water at one time.
So either clean the sand bed frequently or never. I just would never let it sit for 5 years then stir it up again. I think the critters do a great job without my help
 
I don't siphon my sand, I find it too much work with all the rock work and corals I have in my tank. I prefer to get sand sifters and clean up crew.
 
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