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#1
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![]() I do not recommend adding ChemiClean.
Yes start adding the Turbo Calcium. You can use the BRS calculator to calculate how much to add.http://www.bulkreefsupply.com/reef-c...97MBoC9mzw_wcB Check off the calcium chloride option. By adding calcium, that will help bring down your alk. By adding the calcium gluconate, you were effectively carbon dosing your tank with sugar. Once that food supply goes away, the excess bacteria will die back to normal levels so make sure your skimmer and filtration is working properly. How much of a change this is going to be for your corals depends on how much calcium gluconate you were dosing and for how long. After you add the turbo calcium, check the calcium and alk levels again in 24 hours. You could do a water change, but that would be introducing even more chemistry changes which could irritate your corals further. Stopping the calcium gluconate and adding the calcium chloride are the 2 most important things to do right now. Don't raise the calcium more than 50 ppm per day. You can read up here for more about calcium and alkalinity: http://www.advancedaquarist.com/2002/11/chemistry Good luck!
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Mitch |
#2
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![]() Thanks for the advice everybody,
MitchM, I was hoping the Chemiclean would eradicate all this bacterial slime within a few days. I could wait a while after my Ca levels rise, but don't you think Chemiclean would work at all? BRS calculator is great; I bookmarked it. AquaAddict Last edited by AquaAddict; 03-06-2017 at 03:10 AM. |
#3
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![]() It's not known if the erythromycin cetyl sulphate that's in Chemiclean will or won't work with the bacteria you have, so I wouldn't advise it.
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Mitch |
#4
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![]() I wouldn't use ChemiClean either.
When nitrification takes place (ammonia to nitrate), alkalinity is bound up. When denitrification takes place (bacteria eating a carbon source and reducing nitrate and phosphate) they release that alkalinity that was bound up. A sudden drop in nutrients from the bacteria bloom could be the reason why you're seeing this increase in alkalinity. As the alkalinity increases you're going to get calcium precipitation which will lower the calcium even more, and cause the alkalinity to go up further. I would suggest a waterchange with a lower alkalinity salt mix such as Aquaforest. I would add extra calcium to the saltwater while doing the waterchange. IME, calcium can increase by about 50 ppm per day without irritating anything. Alkalinity swings are a real problem though. In your case, the damage has probably already been done. Instant Ocean or Reef Crystals isn't going to help you out much here. |
#5
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![]() Cause and effect, I have never heard of anyone using calcium glucomate as a calcium dosing source.
Definately stop dosing the alk and perform a couple larger waterchanges to bring the alk down to 9, and in future use calcium chloride for dosing calcium. If you want to dose a bacteria source use vinegar in really small amounts but generally I've tried to stay away from carbon dosing because it brings some weird strains of bacteria out.
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Always looking for the next best coral... 90g starphire cube/400mhRadium20k/2 XHO/2x27w UV/2x39w T5/ 3 Trulumen led strips |
#6
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Mitch |
#7
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![]() Kent uses Calcium gluconate too IIRC.
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