Brew12
Electrical Gru
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My Tank Thread
Thanks for the invite!Thanks for the detailed post.
I agree that with you about the dino's. I think that could be cyano or diatoms, but probably cyano.
I would test you new saltwater before you do a water change and make sure that it really is 0ppm NO3. If it is, I would perform a 25% water change. If it's not, I would verify that your test kit is good. A 25% water change should bring your NO3 down to 45 ppm. Make sure that you blow as much detritus off of your rock work as you can.
I'm not really familiar with Radions, but I have seen the schedule for other users, and you may be running them a little low for a 90 gallon tank. I would try to slowly raise the intensity.
What I am more concerned about with your tank is the stagnant growth.
Slowly increasing your PO4 may help with that, and it may help with reducing the nitrates once things in your tank start consuming them. If you do that through dosing, just take it slow and only make one change at a time, that way you know 100% that what you did either worked or didn't.
#reefsquad
@Brew12
@saltyfilmfolks
Can anyone provide some more wisdom on how to solve @vdubreefer's tank problems?
It is an unusual situation that is being described. Very unusual to have high nitrates in a tank so visibly clean and fed so little.
A few questions.
How long do you run your fuge light?
What kind of salt do you use?
Have you testing nitrate with a different test kit?
