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bluesox68 06-22-2012 01:47 PM

Lets talk phosphates
 
Ok so my tank has been running at my house for around 2 months and I am very happy with the progress. I have been able to fix a bad flatworm issue and just now the tank is starting to look really nice. What lives in my tank now are good clean up crew, cleaner shrimp, blood shrimp,serpent stars and yellow watchman goby The tank was filthy when I first got it.


Problem.


I have very high phosphate levels so for that reason I haven't purchased any fish. Again my tank was very dirty when first purchased but since then my levels are getting much better. I have removed the filthy dsb from the fuge and been using phosgaurd. The rest of my levels are fine and I don't have an algae problem or anything? I'm assuming the last owner used tap water so I do expect phosphate to leach from the lr but that will end with water changes right?


Question.


What harm can phosphate do for my tank and could I safely add fish soon?
I don't have the test in front of me but 2 weeks ago the phosphate test turned the water blue instantly without shaking it and as of yesterday its just a light teal almost yellow, Hopefully that makes sence lol.

Anyways any advice would be great Thanks

tang daddy 06-22-2012 03:38 PM

You could run gfo and a reactor to get rid of phosphates, it's very efficient and can drop phosphates quickly, IMO fish can handle phosphates and nitrates to a certain degree so if you can get it to a manageable level and keep it there you're ok!

Proteus 06-22-2012 03:47 PM

+1

I like rowaphos. But if you can use mechanical filtration phosdown is a great product

reefwars 06-22-2012 04:29 PM

phosguard is junk toss it and go with rowaphos or another type of gfo or phosphate remover....phosguard is aluminum based and it works really slow, its ok to keep levels low but not to reduce them...not imo anyways hence the super cheap pricetag...big waste of money:)

Proteus 06-22-2012 04:34 PM

Since you have high readings rowa would be my choice as once saturated it does not leach back into water. But there's a price tag with it

reefwars 06-22-2012 04:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Titus99 (Post 726076)
Since you have high readings rowa would be my choice as once saturated it does not leach back into water. But there's a price tag with it



absolutely..... not cheap so buy the big bottle for savings, like nick said the problem i have with phosguard is it doesnt work as fast and once full it leaches it back into your system so has to be changed alot faster.



edit*** thanks buddy lol :P

Proteus 06-22-2012 04:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by reefwars (Post 726078)
absolutely..... not cheap so buy the big bottle for savings, like nick said the problem i have with PHOSGAURD is it doesnt work as fast and once full it leaches it back into your system so has to be changed alot faster.

Edit: Rowa = good
Phosgaurd = bad

Do you have skimmer. And or refugium

Borderjumper 06-22-2012 05:05 PM

I've been using Foz Down that I got from TimT. It sure worked in my tank! My phosphates are down to almost zero now. I put 4 drops in each of my drains once week, or whenever i remember, the stuff goes directly into my filter socks... I only wish he had something similiar for nitrates!

bluesox68 06-22-2012 07:49 PM

Thanks for all the good info, My lfo swore by phosgaurd...but it looks like its time for rowaphos :mrgreen: So it is safe to assume that phosphate will leach from my lf right? I'm just hoping this isnt a long battle.

Proteus 06-22-2012 07:54 PM

I found that if I had po4 in rocks than you probably have hair algea issue

Just keep up water changes it'll go away


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