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#1
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![]() Quote:
I still wouldn't buy it. ![]() |
#2
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exactly , so lets say your in the store and you see that amazing piece of rock that you know will never come around again.....your gonna buy it regardless of cost and whats on it. most people who are that particular over liverock know what to do or are willing to do it or they simply pass on it.
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#3
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![]() If you're going with dry/quarried rock make sure to soak the rock in RO/DI water and test for PO4. Don't ask me how I know
![]() Once it becomes live... and clean, it works great. Seeding with clean live rock is a good idea for bio-diversity (pods, worms, etc, etc). I know you're trying to keep out the bad, but you also keep out the good. There's more to live rock than de-nitrification. |
#4
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In fact, if the cost was exactly the same for fresh vs. dry, I bet 8 out of ten would switch to real live rock. Regardless of what changes happen in this hobby, the bottom line always comes to cost for the majority of hobbyists. Yes, some don't care, but for most it's a cost thing.
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Brad |
#5
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![]() Quote:
So yes, those people who aren't really passionate about dry rock would probably switch if costs were the same. |
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Tags |
cycle, dryrock, nano |
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