- Joined
- Nov 15, 2009
- Messages
- 2,757
- Reaction score
- 2,500
You are doing fine I think. I donāt understand the processes well enough to answer your question. I just know from experience that Iāve been negligent carbon dosing, drove phosphate to zero (had plenty of nitrate), and then was in a world of hurt with upset corals and slimes and dinoflagellates. Iām hoping to help you avoid that experience.Friend, what am I missing here? I'm genuinely asking
How could the phosphate be so low that I need more in the tank, yet I'm seeing a visible bacteria bloom, which to me suggests that the bacteria are growing and growing well? To me, this seems much more like I need a better skimmer, and without a better skimmer carbon dosing isn't a good fit for this tank.
What would happen if I did add more phosphate (which I'm currently trying to do by adding Reef Roids (all I have on hand))? Wouldn't the bacteria grow even faster, causing cloudier water, and while that growth might use up much of my nitrates and some of my very limited phosphates, it's basically meaningless if I don't have a skimmer capable of pulling the bacteria out?
Again, if I'm completely misunderstanding this carbon dosing process, by all means someone please let me know what I'm missing
Thank you very much again for your help, I really do appreciate it, I'm just kind of slow sometimes![]()
As for the effectiveness of your skimmer, my opinion isā¦if itās making foam and you are collecting skimmate, itās working well enough for carbon dosing.
As for the cloudiness, I understand wanting to resolve that before dosing phosphate. Iām a little surprised you had a bloom based on your dose. Activated carbon might help. That is what Iād try.
Reef roids is pretty effective at increasing phospate. Iāve used it for that purpose in the past. It does add some nitrate too, but we work with what weāve got.


I just want to make sure I'm doing this carbon dosing correctly. This is my first time seriously trying carbon dosing; years ago I made a half-baked attempt.

