Cycling help please!

OceanBlue808

Community Member
View Badges
Joined
Jan 18, 2019
Messages
71
Reaction score
25
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I'm about 3.5 weeks into fishless cycling and two days ago, my ammonia and nitrite were at 0 ppm. I added 2ppm of dr Tim's ammonia to test if I will get zeros again within 24 hrs but I now have 1ppm ammonia and 2ppm nitrite. Does my tank need several more weeks of cycling?
 
U

User1

Guest
View Badges
I'm about 3.5 weeks into fishless cycling and two days ago, my ammonia and nitrite were at 0 ppm. I added 2ppm of dr Tim's ammonia to test if I will get zeros again within 24 hrs but I now have 1ppm ammonia and 2ppm nitrite. Does my tank need several more weeks of cycling?

Don't worry about nitrite in this test, you are checking to see if ammonia is processed in under 24 hours. If not then your cycle isn't complete. Dr. Tim's, or others, need the ammonia to be processed in under 24 hours.
 
U

User1

Guest
View Badges
I have had tanks complete in less than a week, where others took nearly two months.

Yeah - been there as well. There is a good thread on Dr. Tim's here with tests. They compared some other products. Most worked with one in under 24 hours ironically.
 

brandon429

what, exactly, are you doing in your avatar
View Badges
Joined
Dec 9, 2014
Messages
31,035
Reaction score
23,923
Location
tejas
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
your issue is that everyones waste water has different metabolite backups from the initial dosing, and, everyones test kits range.

You are cycled, but not by testing wastewater.
if you changed 100% of the water out, refilled, and retested, it w oxidize ammonia. the other two don't matter. if you cant change it all, you can wait till levels drop naturally which is the varying part. You don't have to assist further, its a wait game if you cant change out your water for a fresh test. the time it takes to register zeroes on waste water is independent of the actual cycling completion date, that date is determined by when a tank can endure a whole water change and still pass the ammonia test. 3.5 weeks is plenty for that= a neat way to see cycling and cycling varations, although cycling itself doesn't vary much at all. all aquariums cycle (meeting this final test) at about the same time frame depending on how the boosters were used.
 

Graciesdad827

New Member
View Badges
Joined
Jun 22, 2019
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
can you give me an update on your cycle? I am on the same boat ammonia and nitrite was 0 and I added 2 ppm ammonia and its day 3 and still getting some reading.. How long for yours to go 0 within 24 hours?
 

TOP 10 Trending Threads

WHAT AMOUNT OF LIVE ROCK AND SAND SHOULD BE PRIORITIZED FOR OPTIMAL BIODIVERSITY/FILTRATION?

  • 100% live rock + bagged sand

    Votes: 34 28.1%
  • 100% dry rock + 100% live sand

    Votes: 41 33.9%
  • 50/50 live/dry rock, 50/50 live/bagged sand

    Votes: 27 22.3%
  • 75% live rock, 25% live sand

    Votes: 11 9.1%
  • 25% live rock, 75% live sand

    Votes: 8 6.6%
Back
Top