Cycle going slow.

Harold999

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I have the same issue. Bought a small Waterbox Cube 10 for the bedroom, thought it would be a quick and easy cycle if i put some established filtermedia from my bigger tank in it and a couple of drops ammonia.
After 10 days, ammonia consumption is still zero. Literally zero (i have a Seneye in the Cube 10 to check).

I made sure to not kill off the bacteria in the filtermedia. Made sure it was the same temperature, same salinity, same Ph/KH etcetera.
 

Freenow54

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To consume ammonia produced by the quarantine inhabitants.
So to cycle you need rock to do it. I have never read about a Quarantine tank containing that. Although I don't know what a bio brick is. Not trying to cause an argument. Wish others would chime in because mine is bare and just did water changes for ammonia
 

Garf

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So to cycle you need rock to do it. I have never read about a Quarantine tank containing that. Although I don't know what a bio brick is. Not trying to cause an argument. Wish others would chime in because mine is bare and just did water changes for ammonia
You can do it with waterchanges, sure. You don’t need rock or expensive biomedia to cycle it, a bag of bioballs and an air bubble works well, or a internal filter loaded will some sort of media or bioballs. I imagine that brick will be knackered if the tank needs medicating with copper but not sure on that, I don’t know if it binds to that ceramic stuff.
 

Nonya

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Cycling involves establishing the bacterial population necessary for the metabolism of ammonia to nitrites to nitrates. It's the nitrogen cycle. I advise you to follow some of the reefkeeping video series on setting up and running SW/reef tanks. Your lack of knowledge and experience in the hobby will end up costing you a ton of wasted money and a lot of dead inhabitants if you dive in.

A few words of advice:
- EVERYTHING bad happens fast.
- When bad thigs happen, go back through the things you did most recently. Thay're the most likely cause.
- Patience is mandatory. There are no miracle products that make good things happen fast. Proceed slowly and keep track of what you've done.
- Your tank will go through one or more ugly phases before it's really stable
- Avoid impulse buys, especially in livestock. You could end up buying something that could be very bad for your tank.
- Don't cheap out. The hobby is expensive enough as it is--even more so since Hawaii banned fish collection. You'll end up spending much more in the long run by constantly upgrading . Go with reliable technology from the start. Ask an experienced reefer what they'd have done differently if they knew back then what they know now.



 
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CDN Reefing

CDN Reefing

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Cycling involves establishing the bacterial population necessary for the metabolism of ammonia to nitrites to nitrates. It's the nitrogen cycle. I advise you to follow some of the reefkeeping video series on setting up and running SW/reef tanks. Your lack of knowledge and experience in the hobby will end up costing you a ton of wasted money and a lot of dead inhabitants if you dive in.

A few words of advice:
- EVERYTHING bad happens fast.
- When bad thigs happen, go back through the things you did most recently. Thay're the most likely cause.
- Patience is mandatory. There are no miracle products that make good things happen fast. Proceed slowly and keep track of what you've done.
- Your tank will go through one or more ugly phases before it's really stable
- Avoid impulse buys, especially in livestock. You could end up buying something that could be very bad for your tank.
- Don't cheap out. The hobby is expensive enough as it is--even more so since Hawaii banned fish collection. You'll end up spending much more in the long run by constantly upgrading . Go with reliable technology from the start. Ask an experienced reefer what they'd have done differently if they knew back then what they know now.




This... this should be a signature post for almost every question. Thanks crit21
 

Nonya

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Just be aware that BRS videos also mention products they just happen to carry. Most of their advice is sound, though.
 
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