I think if you have the space it's a great idea. I'd guess a 100 gallon remote DSB with 6-8 inches would add some diversity as well with all the critters that will grow in there.
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I agree 110%. I personally under feed my fish for years afraid of nutrients. My inhabitants have never looked so healthy. I know so much more today because there is so much more information out there. I had a 120 with a 55 for a sump with a plenum for a couple of years and felt I had good success. Unfortunately when I moved I didn’t have room for the 120 so I downsized so I can’t speak of long term success. Bob Goemans Has a site salt corner. He was a big fan of plenums back in the day. I reached out to him in the past and he always responded. Maybe he can give you some insight.What are the basics? Isn't a sand bed basic?
phosphates and nitrates are coming from fish, which comes from feeding. I do feed good, but don't believe in the idea of starving your fish.
No, a sand bed is not required. I guess the only thing required is a water tight container, water and light. You probably want something with more surface area (unless you do very large daily water changes), it could be rock, sand or any other media.... But we are digressing here, and getting off topic. I just wanted to know what you meant by "the basics". And from your response it sounds like it is maintenance. Yes I maintain my tank very well. There is no rotting food, and I don't see any waste that needs to be removed (I vacuum small sections of my gravel so that the entire bed is vacuumed once a month, but not too much at one time.. I clean my skimmer, and my sump is very clean. I also change my filter floss in my sump every 2-3 days. But I have never had low nutrients (I have some big fish, and feed them well). I have had ok nutrients, and high nutrients, but never low.I don't believe a sand bed has ever been required to keep a reef tank. The nitrogen cycle doesn't depend on the sand bed.
Sand beds can help or actually hurt a system. First things first are good husbandry. If the tank is clean and any waste is removed before it can build up then nutrients shouldn't be an issue.
If you are overfeeding, not cleaning your filters and skimmer frequently and cleaning out your sump as well as your display it's not going to matter what size remote sand bed you put on your tank.
What is "low" nutrients to you? What numbers are you chasing?No, a sand bed is not required. I guess the only thing required is a water tight container, water and light. You probably want something with more surface area (unless you do very large daily water changes), it could be rock, sand or any other media.... But we are digressing here, and getting off topic. I just wanted to know what you meant by "the basics". And from your response it sounds like it is maintenance. Yes I maintain my tank very well. There is no rotting food, and I don't see any waste that needs to be removed (I vacuum small sections of my gravel so that the entire bed is vacuumed once a month, but not too much at one time.. I clean my skimmer, and my sump is very clean. I also change my filter floss in my sump every 2-3 days. But I have never had low nutrients (I have some big fish, and feed them well). I have had ok nutrients, and high nutrients, but never low.
Since you’re trying to reduce nutrients, I’d recommend running the ATS 24/7. It’ll take time to see an impact since you just started back up. Do you also run both lights? If you weren’t already make sure to not completely clean the screen. You don’t want to set back the algae’s growth rate. Once it’s running consistently I bet your nutrients will come down. As far as trace elements I’d recommend doing the Captiv8/Reefblueprint products. A few club members having been using that method over Moonshiners. The Captiv8 trace elements can be mixed together so you’re only having to dose 1 container. Then you adjust after each ICP. Pretty nice alternative to doing the drops daily for each trace element you’re dosing.It had been running about a year, but has been offline for a month or so, and just started it back up last week. I used to remove a few cups of algea a week. I have lighting during the night to help maintain ph.
I have a couple of icps, and just sent a new one off last week. For some reason the share link is not working, so I will post the file here of the latest... I have no idea as to why my iodine is high. I have not been adding anything with iodine (that I know of). I just add BRS calcium and soda ash.
po4 under 0.1, and n03 under 10. With water changes (2% daily) I could maintain that, but without the water changes I can't (it is about 2-3 times that number).What is "low" nutrients to you? What numbers are you chasing?
If everything you are saying is true then I would almost bet a DSB wouldn't do you any good either unless it was huge.
Water changes and a little less feeding would be the basic place to start while maintaining cleanliness and see if you can't drop them and find a happy medium.
If you need something more than that (I haven't seen if you do) an ATS or refugium with cheato would pull more out faster than a DSB.
Since you’re trying to reduce nutrients, I’d recommend running the ATS 24/7. It’ll take time to see an impact since you just started back up. Do you also run both lights? If you weren’t already make sure to not completely clean the screen. You don’t want to set back the algae’s growth rate. Once it’s running consistently I bet your nutrients will come down. As far as trace elements I’d recommend doing the Captiv8/Reefblueprint products. A few club members having been using that method over Moonshiners. The Captiv8 trace elements can be mixed together so you’re only having to dose 1 container. Then you adjust after each ICP. Pretty nice alternative to doing the drops daily for each trace element you’re dosing.
Are you keeping everything consistent? I typically find that when we make changes like these we want them to work so bad that we often, even unknowingly, start to change our pattern to force results...Start No3: 35.6
one week No3: 30.9
two weeks No3: 23.6
Defiantly a downward trend.
That is a good point, and something else absolutely could be playing a part. I am constantly doing things. Like I noted earlier, I removed my denitrate, and ATS (was not growing anything). Also this week I added 8 lbs of live rock from TBS, to try to bring in some biodiversity to fight dinos. I am also adding some coral this week.Are you keeping everything consistent? I typically find that when we make changes like these we want them to work so bad that we often, even unknowingly, start to change our pattern to force results...
Not saying you are but could something else also be playing a part in this?