NS Mike D
New member
I've been thinking about this, aside from removing detritus from the sand bed, is there any real benefit from water changes (not talking about responding to an accidental)?
If you do a 10% water change, that still leaves 90% of what you were seeking to remove - so it seems that a water change isn't really an effective export method.
If you are seeking to replenish what your tank has consumed, seems that unless your tank is consuming trace elements at the same pace as your salt provides during a water change, you are just guessing. We test for a few major elements/compounds, but other that that, who knows if we are concentrating or deficient in the trace stuff.
I change 5gal of my 29gal every week to two weeks and anecdotally it appears that it's good, but as for actual water chemistry - it's really a guessing game. The white sand and the clean glass and other maintenance I do along with the water change is probably giving me a false sense of a "better" tank.
I test for CA, K, MG, Ammonia, Nitrates, Nitrites, Ph and Phospates. I add Red Sea Reef Foundation ABC as per their charts to my water, but I have to confess, I have no idea the levels of the rest of the elements/compounds. Aside from trying to match sea water, I have no clue what levels are good or bad.
Is my logic off base for questioning if water changes are giving me a false sense of security?
If you do a 10% water change, that still leaves 90% of what you were seeking to remove - so it seems that a water change isn't really an effective export method.
If you are seeking to replenish what your tank has consumed, seems that unless your tank is consuming trace elements at the same pace as your salt provides during a water change, you are just guessing. We test for a few major elements/compounds, but other that that, who knows if we are concentrating or deficient in the trace stuff.
I change 5gal of my 29gal every week to two weeks and anecdotally it appears that it's good, but as for actual water chemistry - it's really a guessing game. The white sand and the clean glass and other maintenance I do along with the water change is probably giving me a false sense of a "better" tank.
I test for CA, K, MG, Ammonia, Nitrates, Nitrites, Ph and Phospates. I add Red Sea Reef Foundation ABC as per their charts to my water, but I have to confess, I have no idea the levels of the rest of the elements/compounds. Aside from trying to match sea water, I have no clue what levels are good or bad.
Is my logic off base for questioning if water changes are giving me a false sense of security?