hey all, this is an update to my previous thread that described my many problems that could be remedied with simple more frequent water changes. The last thread I posted on this update told of changing tanks from the 29 to a 55 gallon. I started changing water using wal-mart bought reverse osmosis deionized water (or at least it says so on the label.) 15 gallons (30% of 50) every week, like clockwork, on fridays after work. Before I started to continue using the wal-mart water, I took a gallon down to a water laboratory that I know and had it tested for a few paramaters:
TDS; <.001ppm
DO; 2.6%
PH; 6.98
Phosphate (Po4); 0.01ppm
silicates; <.001ppm
Nh4; .002ppm
Nh3; <.001ppm
These were the chosen tests (all I could afford to have run) This led me to conclude that the water I was using was fine for the time being until I could get a RO D/I unit. The salt that I have been using is the ocean salt. I started having one small problem with the oceanic salt after having moved the small tank. The alkalinity was plummetting about everyother day. (small water changes of 5 gallons remedied this.) I was getting mighty tired of water changes everyother day. Wanting to leave this a pure water change experiment I decided the best way to try to fix this problem would be to add some Kalkwasser. So for about a week I slowly dripped Kalk into my sump using a small 10 gallon trash can placed on a table above the sump, airline tubing and a gang valve used to adjust drip amount. This solved the alkalinity problem. So this experiment has proved at least one thing and that is oceanic salt buffering capacity is very low, agreed? Now. This week (about tuesday) I did a phosphate test and wound up with a reading of 0. This was after I had gotten steady feasable readings for a while. This made me rais an eyebrow and I kept an eye on the tank for a few days. From tuesday on, I came home to a tank becoming steadily encrusted with brown and green slime algae, no hair algae though, that problem seems remedied. Any suggestions on where the algae has come from, how to get rid of it, or if it will run its course in due time? Does anyone see anything wrong with my methods? Should I switch salts to IO to solve the alkalinity problem or keep adding Kalk?
TDS; <.001ppm
DO; 2.6%
PH; 6.98
Phosphate (Po4); 0.01ppm
silicates; <.001ppm
Nh4; .002ppm
Nh3; <.001ppm
These were the chosen tests (all I could afford to have run) This led me to conclude that the water I was using was fine for the time being until I could get a RO D/I unit. The salt that I have been using is the ocean salt. I started having one small problem with the oceanic salt after having moved the small tank. The alkalinity was plummetting about everyother day. (small water changes of 5 gallons remedied this.) I was getting mighty tired of water changes everyother day. Wanting to leave this a pure water change experiment I decided the best way to try to fix this problem would be to add some Kalkwasser. So for about a week I slowly dripped Kalk into my sump using a small 10 gallon trash can placed on a table above the sump, airline tubing and a gang valve used to adjust drip amount. This solved the alkalinity problem. So this experiment has proved at least one thing and that is oceanic salt buffering capacity is very low, agreed? Now. This week (about tuesday) I did a phosphate test and wound up with a reading of 0. This was after I had gotten steady feasable readings for a while. This made me rais an eyebrow and I kept an eye on the tank for a few days. From tuesday on, I came home to a tank becoming steadily encrusted with brown and green slime algae, no hair algae though, that problem seems remedied. Any suggestions on where the algae has come from, how to get rid of it, or if it will run its course in due time? Does anyone see anything wrong with my methods? Should I switch salts to IO to solve the alkalinity problem or keep adding Kalk?