Hi - I've run sulfur denitrators for many years - more than a decade. I also use seachem safe - the powder version of prime liberally. I proactively dose safe if I think anything I do might even has the remotest chance of causing a spike in nutrient availability anywhere in the system.
It can take weeks for a new denitrator to pop - 2 weeks isn't strange - but you should see something soon - I've never seen it take much more. Cloudy water in the top of the denitrator is a good sign that things are progressing.
The only thing I've seen which will cause issues are the use of in-tank antibiotics. In which case I've had to change the media of the denitrator out. Once its running - you can change/refresh media and it will be back on line and working in days as long as you don't clean it too well. Keep some of the older media as "seed" and it will be operating again almost immediately.
When I started with these things - I set them up them like you with the sulfur neatly on the bottom and the coral stone on top. This doesn't seem to work as well as just mixing the sulfur and stone all together. I've also found that only filling the denitrator chamber half way with mixed-up media, leaving 50% of the room for anoxic dead water produces better results.
Cloudiness is good - I bet by the time you read this - you'll have already started to see a drop in nitrates.
It can take weeks for a new denitrator to pop - 2 weeks isn't strange - but you should see something soon - I've never seen it take much more. Cloudy water in the top of the denitrator is a good sign that things are progressing.
The only thing I've seen which will cause issues are the use of in-tank antibiotics. In which case I've had to change the media of the denitrator out. Once its running - you can change/refresh media and it will be back on line and working in days as long as you don't clean it too well. Keep some of the older media as "seed" and it will be operating again almost immediately.
When I started with these things - I set them up them like you with the sulfur neatly on the bottom and the coral stone on top. This doesn't seem to work as well as just mixing the sulfur and stone all together. I've also found that only filling the denitrator chamber half way with mixed-up media, leaving 50% of the room for anoxic dead water produces better results.
Cloudiness is good - I bet by the time you read this - you'll have already started to see a drop in nitrates.
