Yo!!! I hope so when you clean/bath her.Yo !!! The big girl cleaned up well. She will treat you right.
Yeah, this probably is easiest way. Will use air pump to raise pH and add some NeoNitro to raise the nitrate to ~5ppm as well.Muriatic like RHF works well. Some salts lose alk too as they continue to mix (especially if pCO2 is low during a fresh not super well mixed batch, or if there's some microbial growth).
To my knowledge, fish aren't sensitive to KH, ph is the main factor. I qt fish often and never measure KH. I just moved a pbt to 2 different qt tank twice in 3 weeks, and it's still eating and swimming fine. (Long story)I'm planning to migrate the live stocks this afternoon; however, a quick check on Alk with hanna: current tank 8 vs 10.4 (freshly mixed IO salt)
What should I do? Slowly raise current tank to 10 in 2 days?
What a bummer, I should think about this before hand and use different salt.
I remembered reading about this couple months ago. Sanjay and his colleague tried and lose couple of fish but had good result with vivid color and grow.This is newer but ammonium bicarbonate might be a better option to raise nitrate and feed corals:
Is Ammonia Dosing a Possible New Way to Provide Coral Nutrition? | Reef Builders | The Reef and Saltwater Aquarium Blog
Understanding Coral Diseases as well the nutritional needs of corals has been one of the shortcomings of science and the hobby since Jacques Cousteau introduced us to the coral reefs in the 1960s.reefbuilders.com
Read up on it if course before trying it out!
To my knowledge, fish aren't sensitive to KH, ph is the main factor. I qt fish often and never measure KH. I just moved a pbt to 2 different qt tank twice in 3 weeks, and it's still eating and swimming fine. (Long story)
I use a dechlorinizer (forgot brand) one day before adding fish. I'll send a picture tonight.
I thought livestock refers to fish. use Dr Tim One and Only. Otherwise wait 1 month to safely transfer.I remembered reading about this couple months ago. Sanjay and his colleague tried and lose couple of fish but had good result with vivid color and grow.
Right now I just want to make new 190 gallons "dirtier" with nitrate to match the old water.
I'm worry more about corals.
That's so true. I'll add one more rockscape, re-arrange the current a little bit and leave the rest for fish. But everything has to wait for the old back and ass to heal firstSo much room! I'm sure the tangs are loving it. Are you planning on adding more rockscape? That was probably the biggest pain in the ass when I upgraded to also a 27" deep tank. Trying to scape new and old rock in the tank.
@Darkxerox - I will look into it. I think it’s ammonium bicarbonate (not carbonate)A lot of people have been using ammonium carbonate to provide an N source that's actually consumed more easily than nitrate by corals.
Of course look into it before going forward. But I'm considering it myself to balance out my N to P ratio as well.
Some rants on the hump day.
In previous system and current one, I always have to deal with 0 nitrate (dosing neonitro to keep it at 2-5ppm) and 0.2 - 0.6 phosphate.
I dosed Phosphate-E (lanthanum chloride) to bring phosphate down to 0.1 but it comes back up to the range after a few days so I stopped.
Not sure it's from the food or it's leaking back from rocks/substrate.
Currently feeding flakes, tdo pellets and homemade frozen medley but the fish consume most of the food (>90%)
RODI system is not perfect but ok with tds at 2.
A very simple sump/filter system with no sock/roller mat, only skimmer + live rocks/crushed corals.
Used to grow a lot of xenia in the sump from previous system which may mess up with nitrate but the current system's sump is empty.
In general no turf algae except brown/green film on front/back glass every 2-3 days, corals are ok (not dying) but not growing much which is fine.
Only their color is not vivid but not dull either.
Looking for way to improve the color -- so will try phosphate 0.1, nitrate at 5ppm, alk at 8, add more lights