Following along. Would be interesting to see results once GFO and vinegar dosing goes offline.
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Following along. Would be interesting to see results once GFO and vinegar dosing goes offline.
I remember getting slime when using vinegar.Trying to get off vinegar. I vinegar dosed in my previous 210 and it just slimed up everything. It was starting to do the same in my 600. Adding ammonia would mean I would just have to add more vinegar.
Interesting experience. What do you consider long term? I’ve been using bacto balance for 2+ years (I don’t recall exactly) and seems ok so far. It’s probably the longest continuous duration I’ve used carbon dosing. Prior attempts with other carbon sources had starts and stops as I bottomed out nutrients or had other issues.I have been looking at alternatives for years and no bacterial products have worked long term...........GFO is till my go to. I've tried vinegar, NOPOX, MB7, MB clean, Bacto balance. None have worked long term or in any sort of balanced form.
I know Zeo is effective but it strips everything out to starvation.
I haven't tried this yet but red gracilaria algae has a 50/50 consumption rate of No3 & P04. You may want to try an algae filter with only that algae in it.
My current solution is to have a fish load that matches the consumption of my corals and algae in the display. I only run a skimmer.
With the current popularity of new bacterial products I think eventually they will find a bacterial strain that only eats phosphate or a combo that eats both nutrients at the same level. I would only go down this road if the company is completely transparent and names the strains. I'm done with false claims and proprietary products of any kind.
I'm afraid that is very unlikely. Assimilation pathways are regulated according to the needs in all living organisms. The need for N is far higher than the need for phosphorus in bacteria.With the current popularity of new bacterial products I think eventually they will find a bacterial strain that only eats phosphate or a combo that eats both nutrients at the same level. I would only go down this road if the company is completely transparent and names the strains. I'm done with false claims and proprietary products of any kind.
you come to that conclusion I think it will surprise some people.
I could have said “I think it will surprise Randy” :)It will surprise me if it is generally true, yes. I don’t see much rationale for the carbon source to generally matter for P consumption. :)
Interesting experience. What do you consider long term? I’ve been using bacto balance for 2+ years (I don’t recall exactly) and seems ok so far. It’s probably the longest continuous duration I’ve used carbon dosing. Prior attempts with other carbon sources had starts and stops as I bottomed out nutrient
Thanks! It would be interesting to see a poll of how long people stick with carbon dosing.One to two years on everything I have listed.........that's why I'm done with them. Most the the time the P04 would start to creep up and dosing more would just cause a nitrate depletion to zero.
It took me about 6 months with Bacto balance before I started to see P04 creep up continuously without me having to use GFO.
The other problem was some acros would die or go into hibernation near or after 12 months. I can't say 100% that there was a firm cause/effect relationship at that time due to carbon dosing, bacteria or a combo. I did all of this testing on two different acro tanks over a 10 year period. ICP tests were always fine.
I decided that was it for me...........some of my theories are that straight carbon dosing may be advantageous to some bad bacteria and or the commercial bacteria was contaminated or just became detrimental in other ways.
My current main system has been running for two years with no dosing other than Bionic. I had to add some nitrate or P04 due to low fish load occasionally but that's about it. This system is thriving with water changes in the 10-15% range a week.
I'm just relating my experience and have no intent to argue about specific causes, ineffectiveness, ect.
It's back to the old adage for me if you don't know what's in it don't use it.
Thanks! It would be interesting to see a poll of how long people stick with it
You mentioned commercial bacteria. I don’t use any, because I don’t trust it, and I figure I paid good money for the biome on my live rock so I don’t want to mess with it.
Getting close!! I like the strategy. I really enjoy macro algae and I’m sure I’ll have a refugium again, but just for enjoyment. Maybe even a display. I find using it for nutrient control required more frequent care/maintenance than I can accommodate. My lifestyle is better suited to nutrient management via dosing pumps that I can control from the other side of the world.I used vinegar dosing from the time I started it for a few years until I took the tank down. I only intend to use it on my new tank if nutrients exceeds
my new higher target levels. I’m hoping that macroalgae in the main tank and in a refugium, plus other consumers keeps it in reasonable control.
I’m not going to use any either. Same reason. My refugium setup has a bunch of live macro from the local ocean, plus a little gracilaria I got from a local reefer. I expect these and the water and bit of sand they came with will seed more natural bacteria. Right now I’m feeding the macro on ammonia, phosphate, iron, and manganese. I hope it lives, but the ocean stuff may be tricky. But something in the water is clearly photosynthesizing due to the bubbles during the light cycle. I hope it’s not just diatoms growing on the macro and elsewhere since I used tap water with a ton of silicate, but I don’t really see any significant amount growing in the sides of the Brute can or on the rubble on the bottom.
The tank itself will get real ocean live rock and sand in early April. Still waiting on a couple of details to start the build thread, but hope to very soon. That should get the tank biome off to a good start. :)
looking forward to this part because I’m curious. Definitely made a difference in my tank.I will swap out the ammonia for sodium nitrate to see just how much ammonia dosing is removing PO4 as well.