The "How to go Barebottom thread."

A cool side affect of skimming wet is that I believe I don't need to do a water change nearly as often. Well in the formal sense. Right now I am skimming between 5 and 7 gal. a week and replacing that with fresh saltwater. Basically my skimmer is forcing me to do regular water changes on a daily basis. I have been running my BB for about a month now and everything looks great. I am really happy. I haven't cleaned my glass since I added livestock (3 weeks).
 
I asked this on the rock cooking thread without much help. So, wanted to post here. Thanks


I have been cooking my rocks for a few weeks now. When I do the swishing of the rocks between Brute swaps, could I just use fresh RO water? I have been using saltwater but seems like a waste of salt. I go through a lot of water in this process and seems like saltwater would not be needed.

Many people do a freshwater dip with some delicate corals w/o a problem. I wouldn't think a freshwater swishing would be a problem with liverock I am cooking.
 
I do my rock swishing in my water change water. I syphon water from my display into 5 gal buckets, then I use that water to swish. I don't know how much water you use or how much you change from your display, but this is a good way to keep up with your water changes and recycle the old water.
 
I have gone through this before on another thread regarding what exactly wet skimming is and how to do it. I even called Red Sea b/c I have a berlin skimmer and they couldnt advise. I anyone has pics and directions on how to skim wet, PLEASE post it. I am BB now and I continue to skim normally. I want to try the wet skim.
 
topmav1 said:
I have gone through this before on another thread regarding what exactly wet skimming is and how to do it. I even called Red Sea b/c I have a berlin skimmer and they couldnt advise. I anyone has pics and directions on how to skim wet, PLEASE post it. I am BB now and I continue to skim normally. I want to try the wet skim.

Although some skimmers are better at it than others, all you really need to do is raise the water within the skimmer. This will give you more total volume, and you'll know your skimming wet.
 
Right but at the moment i am using a quiet one 3000 and it is pumping whetever it can into the skimmer, no restricitons. Do I need to upgrade my pump to get more water into the skimmer??
 
sorry....

Skimmer.jpg
 
topmav1 said:
Do you mean the exit holes that the clean water comes out of after it goes through the skimmer?

Exactly. You need to figure out how to control the clean water coming out of the skimmer.
 
I see. Thanks for clarifying. So the idea is to have the clean water coming out slower than it is now. By doing that, there will be more volume in the skimmer itself...hmmm...

Thanks
 
causeofhim said:
I have been cooking my rocks for a few weeks now. When I do the swishing of the rocks between Brute swaps, could I just use fresh RO water? I have been using saltwater but seems like a waste of salt. I go through a lot of water in this process and seems like saltwater would not be needed.

Many people do a freshwater dip with some delicate corals w/o a problem. I wouldn't think a freshwater swishing would be a problem with liverock I am cooking.

This is something that I have been curious about as well. I'm going to be cooking rock for a new tank so I won't have recycled water available for swishing. Is there any harm in dunking and swishing the rock in fresh RO water instead of fresh saltwater?

Thanks.
 
mattrix said:
This is something that I have been curious about as well. I'm going to be cooking rock for a new tank so I won't have recycled water available for swishing. Is there any harm in dunking and swishing the rock in fresh RO water instead of fresh saltwater?

Thanks.

I tried it on one rock. Worms, pods, and brine shrimp all jumped ship. Other than that I can't see why it would be bad.
 
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