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![]() I wanted to give the tank a west coast look so using the usual coral based substrate was out. Here's what I did.
Experiment #1: I thought I'd try washed and screened playsand from H.D. (ha ha). I rinsed and rinsed for an hour and figured that had to be good enough so into the tank it went... oops! The water turned into a solid chocolate cloud. I mixed in some salt with hopes that the skimmer would take out the silt and I hoped it would settle. Three days later it was a little less cloudy but my wife pointed out that as soon as a future fish stirred the bottom it would cloud up again. Dang. I wound up siphoning the tank and removing all the playsand. Experiment #1 = disaster. I then thought "the hell with it" and decided to go with plain old white silica sand. Lordco was out so they offered to ship some in from another store. When I returned they had shipped the wrong stuff. It turned out to be a Target product called Blue diamond 20-50 grit and I took it anyways. Experiment #2: Washed the 20-50 grit and only a little dust came out. In the tank it went. No cloudiness and the bottom closely resembles the ocean floor off our coast. Yahoo. Experiment #3: I must have been working a little too much with the PVC cement because I decided that I needed to run some carbon on my new set up. That wasn't so bad but I decided to utilize the flow from my display drainline. I loaded a sock with carbon and secured it to the drainpipe... oops! The flow pulverized the carbon and my tank was back to a smoky cloud again. This time the fix was less drastic than draining the tank. I ran an AC500 with some filter floss for a couple of days and the water cleared up. No more experiments for me. ![]() ![]() Last edited by Dale; 11-23-2006 at 04:51 AM. |
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