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#11
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they came out of a 50 gal tank with little open sand bed so not to much would be my guess. Steve
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#12
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Tahir the "advanced" newbie. If there is such a thing. |
#13
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![]() Your quoting an article by Ron Shimek, who is the most biased person available to comment on DSBs. Many qualified chemists have talked about substances binding to calcerous substrate. An example is the use of kalk to precipitate PO4 from solution. And since Ca is a cation and PO4 an anion, the relationship is obvious. To break this bond would require something with a stornger charge, like HCL. However, although a bath in HCL would remove the PO4, the size of most sugar sands would lend itself to complete dissolution in the time required to cleanse it. Large crushed coral can be successfully washed in acid.
Further "proof" for me is the fact that I had removed some of my sand, cleaned it, and replaced it back in the tank. ALmost immediately it started growing algae again. I believe this algae growth is due to the presence of PO4 adsorbed onto the sand. As a note, I now have a 1.5 inch sandbed and no detectable nitrates present.
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Brad |
#14
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What makes you say that a properly setup DSB has many benifits and few negatives? Ron's article? Or long term personal experience?
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Brad |
#15
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![]() Oh my, I guess this means that eventually I will have to remove the DSB and the sand bed in the aquarium is enough for the job. Or will it be enough to remove the top few inches of the DSB every year and replace with new sand? The main question being does the DSB still perform denitrification even with the PO4 bonding? Thus changing the top few inches would take care of the algae growth on the sand.
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Tahir the "advanced" newbie. If there is such a thing. |
#16
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![]() My (wrong) thoughts also. I tried doing that, but the algae continued. The PO4 accumulation also inhibits coral calcification, which I did notice as well. Denitrification does continue (it is not a function of the media composition, only size) although the 4" inches recommended by Dr. Ron isn't required. The aragamax bag actually says only 1" required, and I have found this to be true. In fact, a tank with the proper amount of quality porous rock should have 0 nitrates.
I believe that most people will need to remove their sand when it hits the 4year range. This should also be a consideration when purchasing used sand. The bad stuff comes with it!! What i did was remove all my sand, and I added 2 bags of new sand. I am so far please with the results. I have a large selection of sand fauna, 0 nitrates, and the tank is now 3 inches deeper than it used to be.
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Brad |
#17
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this is one area where me and Brad disagree (not to often you'll find that) but I think it was more a problem with the depth and the bottom areas of the sandbed becomming septic and causing compounds that would not normaly be formed in a non septic enviorment to leach back to the water colume. by reducing the depth you get rid of these septic areas and thus no bad stuff. I don't think Brad can say for sure it was because he put new sand in or because he reduced his depth as the sand he had in there had contaminated stuff from another source ![]() Dr ron's original theorys were good and work in the Ocean but even he admidts that in the hoby we only have 1 or 2% of the different types of critteres needed to make it all work properly, and for the past few months he has been backtracking on his whole sand bed theorys and trying to blame everything else like heavy metals and different brands fo salt for the sand bed failurs that were set up to his method. Steve
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#18
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I've had 0 nitrares since a few weeks after setup, lots of healthy macro algae, and copepod growth. Corraline growth is good and coming along nicely. Every week I pull out more hair algae, and it's not growing back. The only thing I'm worried about is Valonia, but I figure once all the excess nutrients, due to the hair algae die off, are exported it will be better. I'll post my success/failure after I finish adding all my planned organisms. But don't hold your breath, that could take years according to my plan. ![]()
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Tahir the "advanced" newbie. If there is such a thing. |
#19
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Tahir the "advanced" newbie. If there is such a thing. |
#20
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Steve
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