I've also thought of dumping in 8oz of Dr. tims the day before the move. I do have 3-44 Gallon Brute cans at the house now. Just bought 2 for my water mixing station that I'll be building in the next month or so. I am in no rush to proceed before the 120 is ready. The safety of my critters is most important. On a side note: pretty sure my Powder Blue is ready to stretch some fins since this build took longer than anticipated. Bought him with the plan of having it go to the 120 after QT but took longer and he has been in the 30 since the end of August. Not happy with myself for doing that to him. He is eating well and has bulked up even being cramped. Stressed I'm sure but a testament as well to the tank being parasite free.I do, and this is to me a very risky thing to be hollering out across the web and a few counties frivolously as you have money on the line and quarantine time and obvious care for your animals.
To begin full on is not an arbitrary action, it’s all in. love it.
To me the science of cycling is nothing if it’s not predictable. Cycling is one of the few aspects of chemistry we encounter in reefing with a recurring terminal date across tanks, independent of what test kits show for the critical parameter. Your sand alone should be enough with the additional filtration, the live components and the time+boosters. Then you’d add in decor which is more curvy surface area and skimming, in my opinion it’s ready. With your test and their 7 day test, we will have a heckuva visual on depositional microbiology.
Clouding is the number one key to watch if you go full fish, which I think is ok-better to mete out in increments though, and am still shocked those guys are so sure about 7 days.
It feels weird to me at 37 ishdays but surface area and duration rules the day, not feelings. Any untoward clouding is the harbinger. By all means on the day of setup only add two, then two the next day I’m not trying to put your fish on the line for my daily thread hashings. We’re rushing plenty good for my speed
Have a full brute can of prep water made and ready, what harm is insurance when we’re breaking thirty year tradition.
Should you dose Prime, or ammonia offsetting items, all testing on that body of water becomes null as it throws everything off. Visual clouding of the water above norms is the absolute best and fastest and most reliable indicator in my opinion, clouding was what signaled the complete water change for me as I fish-in cycled a brand new 55 tank with twenty neons that did not die, and plastic decor. Very similar cycle to yours but I did rip changes and used zero testers of any kind. I don’t own reef test kits, my reef drawer is a thermometer and a swing arm and a padi diving book. Surface vs suspension cycling confers the ability to forego testing and that’s handy.
My clouding broke / surfaces active after three weeks...then it ran with normal feeding thereafter without help. It met the rules pretty close for google cycling charts but I was indeed still boosting. One dose of B.B. was def not enough, twenty neons day one would’ve wiped the tank and overcame the initial dose. cpr water changes and redosing of bacteria, due to suspension cycling rules, is the only reason the cycle worked without loss.
The fish loading you are introducing is correct for the surface area for a mature tank, and it’s also a lot for the first entry, if any bad calls have been made the exact manifestation will be minor clouding initially. then fish breathing increases, gill action, and top clinging behavior or hiding behavior. Water change time. Make sure sandbed clouding isn’t misinterpreted as ammonia clouding.
I don’t think I’d feed for the first two days... feed em well wherever they’re at now right before the move. We are usually dealing with live rock in my threads, which is a surface area cheat but you have some and you have hidden surface area boosts as well. Fire thrusters at fifty percent ramp up is my reco
I appreciate your insight and knowledge in tank cycling. Thanks. I'll post updates here as fish are introduced.