![]() |
#21
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() I dunno if I really buy into the "it takes away coral food aka fish poop." They poop enough that the filter sock and the skimmer for that matter are not hurting the corals food chains. The copepod removal, I do see that one, but that's one of the reasons I sit there for 5 minutes picking them out of the sock getting my fingertips stinky and putting them back in the tank. And the nitrate factory .. well my tank went from chronic nitrates at >25ppm to 1-2ppm after I started using socks so I'm not sure that's as significant as people say. So yeah, basically it comes down to "use them" or "don't use them" as per whatever one you prefer more.
![]() ![]()
__________________
-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#22
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() I'll turn mine inside out and shake into the sink. Usually a few pods, the tiny brittle stars and some small snails I'll throw back into the fuge. Collected a clown once and a peppermint shrimp, sure made me jump back.
|
#23
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() I change mine out every week when I do my water change only been using them for about 2 months now dont seam to have any problems since I started using them. I am using them to keep my sump clean I got tired of having to clean the sump every week.
|
#24
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() I used to use them, but now, 3 months without, and tank is nice and clean. Acctually, getting baby snails growing now. Don't know if it's just the maturity of my tank, or related to the socks??
__________________
Dan Pesonen Umm, a tank or 5 |
#25
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Quote:
I think the person posting in that thread is talking about 'sps systems' which these days seems to mean ultra low nutrient systems. I should have been much more clear about this...I am talking about low to ultra low nutrient systems that rely on heavy feeding to keep corals growing. I was thinking it but of course forgot to actually type it ![]() So...In that case, you can actually strip the water too much. I know some people who don't have many fish and are using systems like ZEO, need to overfeed just to keep color in their corals. I have a zillion fish now, feed as much as they want (enough that sheets of nori gets left uneaten now!?!) and don't register much nitrates (2 ppm) or any phosphates anymore after about a month of ZEO (no algae taking them up either). Actually more like a few months of ZEO but one month on the new tank. My corals keep their color and I assume its because I feed so much and have a lot of fish...I am by no means down to that 'Ultra low nutrient' system quite yet but my tank seems to be headed that way. My thought (and I believe the RC posters) was that at that point, filter socks can start to take too much out of the water. Not everyone running ZEO is getting to those 'ultra low nutrient' levels though, so its not just a ZEO thing...I still see ZEO tanks with hair algae growing. So they obviously still have nutrient problems. Anyways, that might clear what I was thinking up a little. I agree, they aren't going to take too much 'crap' out of a regular system but when you are purposely feeding the tank, whether it be coral food, fish food, amino acids, ect. and then are using a filter sock to catch out some of that stuff, I am not so sure it makes sense. Or at least I can see where people on that side of the argument are coming from ![]() Last edited by GreenSpottedPuffer; 04-04-2009 at 04:37 AM. |
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|