This means that your NO3 readings are caused by NO2 interference and not a real NO3 reading, For further information - please read this thread
- Nitrite is around 2ppm
- Nitrate is as below ss.
Sincerely Lasse
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This means that your NO3 readings are caused by NO2 interference and not a real NO3 reading, For further information - please read this thread
- Nitrite is around 2ppm
- Nitrate is as below ss.
Can you provide a link to a cycling thread that you recommend? And, I’ve been wondering this for a very long time - hire does one “bump”!Welcome to the site! Glad to meet you on your first post.
-It is 23rd day of cycling-
=that means done, not because a test kit shows zero. Most times they don’t, and you’re still done because no cycling chart has a 23 day ammonia line they have a ten day one for a reason. We define mis testing events using this hardfast rule.
no the tank isn’t ready for fish because that would instantly bring in disease by skipping all preps and we can see in the fish disease forum how that goes down.
mods:
UNSTICKY THIS THREAD: IT IS OLD CYCLING SCIENCE AND ITS AUTHOR DOESNT POST ON THE SITE ANY LONGER
this thread should only be bumped when people post. To have old cycling science as a formal reference holds back cycling evolution: no guidance for disease preps is in Brews writing and that’s what makes this a dated old cycling science thread
a cycled tank is ready for fish when the selected disease protocol warrants addition. It has nothing to do with the tested levels
“…(how) does one…bump”!Can you provide a link to a cycling thread that you recommend? And, I’ve been wondering this for a very long time - hire does one “bump”!
Adding a fish – while it will work as an ammonia source, why would you make a fish suffer in an environment in which it can’t properly shed its toxins?
But @Brew12 covered your " fish in " (but not testless) cycling method in the first post.I hate to shamelessly plug my own links on brews post
Thanks for the info. Sorry, but I have to ask, do you have any relationship with Seneye?The universal rule in testless cycling is that a pinch of ground up fish food, ground well, added to the system along with any brand of common cycling bacteria will cycle submerged surfaces within ten days enough to carry a common decent bioload in reefing.
you don’t have to add ammonia to 2 ppm and attempt to detail measure it, simple fish food works fine. It degrades into what we need
anyone with a calibrated seneye machine can report back the spot checks.
cycling charts have a ten day ammonia drop line, maybe twelve days on some. but that’s a tight range…it’s not twenty days on any chart published for example. so we pick a calendar date ten days out for all common cycle approaches and that’s their start date in these testless cycle threads. If they haven’t added fish food, add some then start the count.
uncured ocean rock is the variable set, if it’s full of sponges and tunicates destined to die in the shipping plus tank transfer that can exceed ten days but those aren’t the majority cycle types
bottle bac cycles on dry rocks are the majority cycling type, and that’s ten days under the stew mentioned above plus a water change at the end so there’s no need to test it-that’s how we make testless cycles out of any reef tank. it will be done by day ten and the charts show it so why bother testing for ammonia control it isn’t going to fail in an inoculated, warmed and circulating body of water.
we could be replacing that ammonia testing time with reading in the disease forum to avoid quick disease outbreaks in new tanks.
ammonia is the only parameter we track nowadays in cycling we don’t care about nitrate and nitrite
ammonia control can be predicted off wait times without any testing, testing is now optional.
Official cycling charts are all the same because that’s how many days each parameter takes to stabilize in an aquatic system where inoculated, and of sufficient surface area and presentation in the water table. Testless cycles are merely setup, stewed for ten days, water changed, then you can relocate those rocks into any tank as a skip cycle setup or use them where they sit.
Bacterial adhesion happens within ten days given bottle bac and added fish feed or bioloading, thats the secret of updated cycling science. You don’t have to test it is the benefit.
the entire point of this 100 page thread below is Dr. Reef testing how long the various strains took to adhere to surfaces, look how rigorous his method is:
what’s the recurring completion date among all strains tested there? The dates go even faster when fish food powder is added because that also boosts strains of bacteria that use ammonia as an energy substrate
over time and as additions bring selected species into the system, those initially dosed bac strains die out and are outcompeted for vital space (the filter surfaces)
that similarity across brands is updated cycling science, that reef cycles are so predictable in timing completion you can make sixty year old charts with them and run todays reef tanks off them just the same. The reef-specific part is that we only care about ammonia. If this was freshwater cycling, nitrite would be the top contender and ammonia would be low totem pole.
I do not have the more detailed analyses postulated by the much more knowledgeable gentlemen above, but the most basic next step is to add reef salt mix, then nitrifying bacteria and a source of ammonia. You want to buy your choice of Red Sea Salt, Instant Ocean Reef Crystals Reef Salt or other salt of your choice. Then a bottle of beneficial bacteria like Microbacter 7, Dr. Tim’s One And Only, etc. If personally go with Red Sea Salt and Dr. Tom’s. And then pinch of finely ground fish food or nitrite additives now sold for this purpose, with detailed instructions. Look at the above posts and you’ll find lots of information. Welcome to reefing and may the fish be with you! (Uh, good luck!)I just started the cycle on my tank yesterday. I added Caribsea live sand and also some Caribsea life rock. Got a heater, pump and wave maker in the tank running. Can I just let the process run on its own or should I try and add anything in it to start the ammonia process?
And read and ask questions at your local fish store and then read some more!I just started the cycle on my tank yesterday. I added Caribsea live sand and also some Caribsea life rock. Got a heater, pump and wave maker in the tank running. Can I just let the process run on its own or should I try and add anything in it to start the ammonia process?
There is already rodi saltwater 1.025 in the tank currently as it cycles. I did buy a quick test kit from api till it cycles than I’ll buy the hanna checkers. Running my parameters as we speak just so I can know what’s goin on in the tank. Haven’t added any bacteria at all just from scratch stillI do not have the more detailed analyses postulated by the much more knowledgeable gentlemen above, but the most basic next step is to add reef salt mix, then nitrifying bacteria and a source of ammonia. You want to buy your choice of Red Sea Salt, Instant Ocean Reef Crystals Reef Salt or other salt of your choice. Then a bottle of beneficial bacteria like Microbacter 7, Dr. Tim’s One And Only, etc. If personally go with Red Sea Salt and Dr. Tom’s. And then pinch of finely ground fish food or nitrite additives now sold for this purpose, with detailed instructions. Look at the above posts and you’ll find lots of information. Welcome to reefing and may the fish be with you! (Uh, good luck!)
Where has the ammonia come from? Have you added some fish?Just a little update been running tests after adding Fritz zyme 9. Ammonia .50ppm, nitrite .50-1.0ppm, and nitrite 10ppm. We are getting there slowly but surely.