<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9134923#post9134923 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by gman107
thank you for the response Insane reefer... i really do appreciate it.
No problem Gman

That is what this thread is for. I hope you get your rock kured out.
Other thoughts on kuring...
Another thing to keep in mind is water volume vs kuring. I've noticed shorter cure times in large capacity bins. Just filling to the top of the rock doesn't do a lot of good - you can test your water 2 hours later and have it off the charts, so basically your rock is stewing in it's own juices.
Now granted, I am trying to turn this into a spare time job, and so I am spending a bit more on stuff, but I'm getting 2, 55g plastic barrels at a local salvage reseller ($10 each). These have never been used, and are HDPE, clear plastic. Drill them and add a plastic faucet at the bottom. Get a "y" diverter and split the garden hose so I can fill both barrels at once, and leave it to dribble, and open the bottom faucets a touch for flow through - could even run the lines to garden beds, where the rich water would do most stuff pretty good. I will post how that works, and if a 10-20g a day change rate is good, or what. Suggestions are welcome.
I also think that the estimate for kure times has been shortened to an unreasonable amount of time somewhere along the way. IF you can cure in an open waterway (creek, river, pond, ocean, etc), then a estimated kure time of 6-8 weeks could be expected, and is often reported. However, most folks are kuring in closed containers, trying to use as little h2O as possible, and I think that one should expect a lot longer kure - something in the order of 4 months.
That's why toilet kuring rocks

Constant water changes mean the rock never stews. Now to convince DH to put a 50g kuring tank over the toilet...
That's my 2 cents, for what it's worth
