I've got a 340 gallon display that is 6 ft long, 3 ft wide, and 31" tall with a 75gallon sump, skimmer, algae turf scrubber, matrix rock denitrator (in a cannister filter), and pellet reactor (as a denitrator).
It's been setup for 4 years, and after seeing some other people's tanks in person, I realize I have insufficient rock. Not just for filtration (though that is a motivator in and of itself) but for aesthetics. I've only got rock on the bottom 15" of my display and the top half of the tank is empty. I would like to create some more verticals to my rocks creating more caves and creating more places for corals, and take advantage of the width of my tank as well, by expanding into the back of it more while adding layered height.
Current rocks:
I have currently approximately 130-150 pounds ( at most) and 200 lbs of sand.
With vodka dosing, a reefmat, an algae turf scrubber, a cannister filter filled with matrix rock, I've reached the limits of my filtration. For the last few months now, my phosphates stabilized between .03 and .07 and nitrates between 35 and 39.
Plan: Due to aquascaping an living ecosystem that I wish to enhance, without harming, I plan to add 20-30 lbs of the rock to my sump and add 20-30 lbs (starting the process of restacking rock) to stabilize the next level of rocks.
I've added 10-20lbs in the past without really any cycle issues. The new rock is dry, bleached and acid washed rock, some of it never used, But either way it's been dry for over a year now in storage. Should be pretty clean rock.
What is the max I can add to my sump and display without causing some weird nitrogen cycles? Can I add 100 lbs to my current 150 or so without any negative impacts (other than needing to drain water from the sump due to displacement).
With the high nutrients the bioload is pretty high with around 20 fish, many of them pretty large! (10-12 inches in length.) I feed 8-10 cubes of frozen food a day and 2 sheets of nori per day 4 times a week. (I have one fish that will swallow a half sheet to whole sheet of nori by himself.)
As bacteria colonize the new rock surfaces would they give off ammonia until they're established, and if so, would the other bacteria be able to compensate for it?
It's been setup for 4 years, and after seeing some other people's tanks in person, I realize I have insufficient rock. Not just for filtration (though that is a motivator in and of itself) but for aesthetics. I've only got rock on the bottom 15" of my display and the top half of the tank is empty. I would like to create some more verticals to my rocks creating more caves and creating more places for corals, and take advantage of the width of my tank as well, by expanding into the back of it more while adding layered height.
Current rocks:
I have currently approximately 130-150 pounds ( at most) and 200 lbs of sand.
With vodka dosing, a reefmat, an algae turf scrubber, a cannister filter filled with matrix rock, I've reached the limits of my filtration. For the last few months now, my phosphates stabilized between .03 and .07 and nitrates between 35 and 39.
Plan: Due to aquascaping an living ecosystem that I wish to enhance, without harming, I plan to add 20-30 lbs of the rock to my sump and add 20-30 lbs (starting the process of restacking rock) to stabilize the next level of rocks.
I've added 10-20lbs in the past without really any cycle issues. The new rock is dry, bleached and acid washed rock, some of it never used, But either way it's been dry for over a year now in storage. Should be pretty clean rock.
What is the max I can add to my sump and display without causing some weird nitrogen cycles? Can I add 100 lbs to my current 150 or so without any negative impacts (other than needing to drain water from the sump due to displacement).
With the high nutrients the bioload is pretty high with around 20 fish, many of them pretty large! (10-12 inches in length.) I feed 8-10 cubes of frozen food a day and 2 sheets of nori per day 4 times a week. (I have one fish that will swallow a half sheet to whole sheet of nori by himself.)
As bacteria colonize the new rock surfaces would they give off ammonia until they're established, and if so, would the other bacteria be able to compensate for it?