thoughts on this?

thats what I was thinking. If you look at the bag is says safe for all reef and inverts, but anyone can put that on. Is there anything on the market thats safe and works? I still have my red slime issue. It now covered my pipe organ coral. I have to suck ut off every other day.
 
I don't believe in miricles in a pill or bottle anyway, besides it would be just a band aid and not a cure. Do a search for the possible causes such as lack of flow, old lights, excess nutriants etc...and try to correct them....in the mean time I would keep siponing it out and do water changes...HTH
 
Do you use RO water to mix up your salt water?

Basically for cyano, lots of water changes, lots of high quality carbon (not just any ol' carbon will do) changed frequently, heavy duty wet skimming and lots of current.

I notice you run an ehiem. While great filters, any canister filter traps and holds a lot of organic debris. They need to be cleaned out every few weeks, more often when having cyano problems.
 
Bill - whats your take on carbon - what makes carbon high quality? From what I've read you should be looking for the irregular shaped ones- not the small pellet type. Are there specific brands - or forms?

And how often and what percentage water changes would you do?
 
Doug,

Yes small irregular shaped carbon works best. Brand wise, anything labeled research grade is typically top of the line. Also Marinelands Black Diamond is excellent, they don't label it as research grade but I find the results in an aquarium to be comparable to the Aquarium Pharmaceuticals research grade carbon.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7019370#post7019370 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by billsreef
Do you use RO water to mix up your salt water?

Basically for cyano, lots of water changes, lots of high quality carbon (not just any ol' carbon will do) changed frequently, heavy duty wet skimming and lots of current.

I notice you run an ehiem. While great filters, any canister filter traps and holds a lot of organic debris. They need to be cleaned out every few weeks, more often when having cyano problems.

HI, I do you ro/di water. I guess I can work on changing the filter pads more often. Do you reccomend a complete new set of pads every month, of if they are not to bad just a rinse and re-use?

I also have a skimmer. I will get some carbon as well.

thanks
 
You know what I would like to know, in the eheim there are different types of media (from bottom to top)

Fiberglass type tubes, blue course pad, white rocks things, white pad, carbon pad.

So the question is are you suppose to rinse the tubes and rocks or not? Also how often do you change them. I was once told take a handful out each time you clean and replace with new????
 
I would rinse them out in tank water to remove the detris and not kill off any beneficial bacteria and just replace the filter and carbon pads. Then just replace the water for a water change. I would do this any time you notice a decrease in water flow.
 
Pretty much like Mike says, just rinse those tubes and rocks to clear out the detritus. For the pads, it depends a bit on the pad. If they are easily rinsed, I'm a cheap SOB and rinse them :D However, if they are not easy to rinse, I'd change them out. Carbon needs to be replaced at least once a month, more often when fighting cyano.
 
So I did a huge filter cleaning, changed all pads washed some of the media, added phosban and did some water changes. Happy to say red slime is 99% gone and my tube corals are out again.

I can see sand now...... Hope it stays this way
Thanks for all the help
 
So your problem is cured now? Or you just did all of that stuff a day ago and it looks clean and by tomorrow you'll find out your whole tank is red again? (Just asking cause thats what happens to me ;) ) -- But my tank is about 2 months old- so I'm not really concerned with it at this point ...
 
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