Turbo-start

Dustin P.

New member
So I bought a bottle of turbo-start at eddie's when I was setting up my 20 gal. tank about 9 or 10 days ago...says that you only need to wait a week before adding fish....I brought home 1 astrea snail, 1 boxer crab, and 1 chocolate chip star (and a small brittle star which hitchhiked his way in my tank with some liverock) 2 days ago...everybody seems to be doing great...I was just wondering about everybody else's opinion of turbo-start...good, bad, indifferent?
 
they had boxer crabs at eddies ????

wait out your cycle... Dont rush it...

also I dont think that the choclate stars are reef-safe,,, Not sure if you planned on that or not for the future or not...
 
I love turbo start for when stuff goes wrong and you need a quick cure for it. I wouldn't recommended it knowing now that waiting is the only eway to go. I was at eddies last night and I had to grab a bottle for my nano cube. last week I set up my 12 galllon nano for my peacock . there was still traces of a cycle going on. put turbo in and in 5 hours the readings were at zero.
 
yeah...Im thinking about bringing the choc. chip star back...I only have one snail in the tank with him that he hasn't bothered yet, but I know he was eating all of our snails at work. btw, I bought the boxer crab at the HPC ...now if you start with live sand in your tank does it decrease the time it takes to cycle? I only have the few inverts in the tank right now, but would like to add more when possible..
 
turbo start is fine to use as a "starter" butr I would still wait out your cycle. FWIW I can't think of a reason to use it after your tank has cycled.

Amy- Just curious...what is a "trace of a cycle"
 
I used half sand from my big tank and love rock from the main tank. so I was having a quick minin cycle. I had a trace of nitrite and convert to nitrate wich you then remove with a water change. it is a mantis shrimp so I am not stressing to much. those things have been known to live in a bucket with no filter and live.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8002656#post8002656 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Dustin P.
yeah...Im thinking about bringing the choc. chip star back...I only have one snail in the tank with him that he hasn't bothered yet, but I know he was eating all of our snails at work. btw, I bought the boxer crab at the HPC ...now if you start with live sand in your tank does it decrease the time it takes to cycle? I only have the few inverts in the tank right now, but would like to add more when possible..

Everything I have seen points to them noshing on everything in a reef tank. You would probally be better off returning. What about a brittle star though?
 
if the brittle star is green with yellow bristles, they are know fish eaters. definately will get way too big for a 20 gallon. Dustin, have a look through the nano tank forums and nano-reef.com for animals that will go well in there. PJ bangaiis, some gobies, clownfish, etc will all be fine. For a seastar, try to find a red fromia star- there are ones that don't get beyond 2 inches or so.
 
turbo start is great but its like the person at my lfs store said its bacteria that eats the bad stuff if you put it in before you ad the inhabitants most of it will die of because theres nothing to eat my tanks never had any real spikes like i read from other people and i was cheaking my parameters every three days maybe i got luck twice
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8002869#post8002869 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by jallard


Amy- Just curious...what is a "trace of a cycle"

I think she means that the ammonia and nitrite and nitrates were starting to show some spikes, and in such a "cycle" was being noted in the tanks biological process of stablization.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8007488#post8007488 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by t-bone2
turbo start is great but its like the person at my lfs store said its bacteria that eats the bad stuff if you put it in before you ad the inhabitants most of it will die of because theres nothing to eat my tanks never had any real spikes like i read from other people and i was cheaking my parameters every three days maybe i got luck twice

I have used it in tanks that have been moved, it helps to move the cycle along and minimize the length of time that inhabitants are exposed to ammonia. Helps with a bad situation if you can't get them out.

AS far as starting fresh. You need to add ammonium nitrate to kick off the cycle. This was how they started the system at Eddies.
 
helps with a bad situation in established tanks like xian said. in new tanks i let the natural proccess take hold with no help and thus is stronger to resist change. time is better than this stuff....M.O.
 
Some tips from moving my 55

Keep as much water as possible

Seed the new sand bed with live sand from the old bed.

Monitor carefully: the tank should cycle but minimally

If the ammonia levels rise too high turbo start may help to knock it down quickly. I've heard of others using amquel but I never used it before.

Let algae grow in the tank.
 
What is the amount of time for establishing when just moving a tank, or is that irrelevant? Just use the water from the buckets of the fish, inverts and corals you are moving?
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8029766#post8029766 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Coral007
What do I do with the coral, fish and inverts meanwhile?

As I stated, this plan is for moving the whole tank, at one time. Ideally you would set up a smaller system to house them in until you were sure the display tank was cycled. If you did not have that option you may have to move them in existing tank water and place they and that water back into the tank after you move it.
 
Back
Top