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#21
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![]() Yeah can't beat the price
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#22
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![]() I am happy with Instant ocean too!
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#23
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![]() I also find that once you open a bag or bucket the salt tends to clump with humidity thus altering the salt composition. Keep in mind, these salts are rated at 1.021sg, not 1.025, so a 50 gallon bag will render only 42 gallons of "reef" water. Last edited by mr.wilson; 12-30-2012 at 02:46 PM. |
#24
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![]() Actually you can. If you buy IO and add your own calcium chloride it will cost less than IORC and it will be closer to NSW levels.
The idea of supplementing calcium, alk, magnesium etc. through water changes only works if there is a demand/depletion and if the water changes are large and frequent. A reef tank that is 30 gallons or smaller would benefit from such a salt if weekly water changes of 10% or greater were made. A large tank with infrequent water changes would not benefit from supplementation through water changes. If you are dosing chemicals or using a Ca reactor, there is no need for a salt with level elevated beyond NSW. H2Ocean and Tropic Marin are both closer to NSW levels than either IO product. Tropic Marin is supposed to be homogeneous, so it is better suited for people who want to use an open bucket over time without compromising quality. |
#25
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FWIW, Randy Holmes Farley uses IO and adds calcium to get it to NSW levels. You won't find a better water chemistry authority than him. |
#26
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![]() I open my buckets and do water changes, I put the top back on properly and have never had a problem doing it this way...I also do not dose with anything and do not plan to.
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#27
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I don't trust heaters either. It isn't a matter of if, but when they will fail. The bigger mystery is whether they will fail in the off position or fatal on position. The same is true of solenoids and actuator valves on auto top off systems; will the ATO jam in the "kill the tank" mode or "kill your marriage/flood" mode ![]() I prefer titanium heater construction, but I do like the double fail safe of glass heaters with built-in thermostat. I set the secondary thermostat of an aquarium controller to a higher temp (80f) so it overrules the built-in thermostat (78f) should it jam in the on position. Using multiple salts isn't a bad idea. You are more likely to encounter a salt with a deficit than surplus, but anything is possible. As salt prices become more competitive, salt manufacturers will be looking for ways to cut costs. If using magnesium sulphate is cheaper than magnesium chloride we would pay the cost. |
#28
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I don't know how they remove algae, bacteria and other unwanted incidentals like cigarette butts and needles ![]() The other question is how salts interact as they dehydrate. Adding salt to an insufficient quantity of water or adding water directly to salt will yield strange results so I would assume the same is true of the dehydration process??? Quote:
![]() Yeah, let's keep this civil and limit the discussion to safe topics like religion and politics. |
#29
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#30
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![]() Absolutely... just like tap water... according to local Egypt laws and standards, providing a civil war isn't pending
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