To start with, the critters in my tank are doing awesome, fish and corals all seem to be doing amazing. I have several types of anemones and they've been reproducing and none are dying so a sign of happiness. SPS, LPS, and soft corals are all growing great and having great color.
In a 340 gallon mixed reef, setup about 6 years.
So, the issue is a strange one. My front glass has a white cloudiness I've been so far unable to remove. I use a scraper weekly to remove algae from all sides of the glass and have a flipper as well that I use to scrape the front glass throughout the week (it's an in wall display).
I've tried to scrape the front glass pretty hard, and puffs of white cloud off the glass, but it doesn't completely remove the cloudiness.
I think I've read in the past that this could be some type of calcium bonding to the glass. It's not coraline or hard or anything, in fact the glass feels smooth, but the cloudiness doesn't wipe or scrape off all that well. I've gotten lines to come off it seems (or some of my snails are able to create random lines through the white cloudiness, but my scraper does not. At least not in a consistent way. There's streaks of paths where the whiteness is removed, but more there's very apparent white cloudiness areas.
Note, this is not the outside of the glass, it's definitely wet side. I've made my own amonia free glass cleaner on the outside and wiped it down really well and wiped it really well and no visible change in the white cloudiness.
My next step was to try a magic eraser on the wet side and see if something with some abrasiveness is able to clean it.
I'm assuming this is a chemistry issue with aging tanks and higher calcium levels, but curious what others' experiences are?
In a 340 gallon mixed reef, setup about 6 years.
So, the issue is a strange one. My front glass has a white cloudiness I've been so far unable to remove. I use a scraper weekly to remove algae from all sides of the glass and have a flipper as well that I use to scrape the front glass throughout the week (it's an in wall display).
I've tried to scrape the front glass pretty hard, and puffs of white cloud off the glass, but it doesn't completely remove the cloudiness.
I think I've read in the past that this could be some type of calcium bonding to the glass. It's not coraline or hard or anything, in fact the glass feels smooth, but the cloudiness doesn't wipe or scrape off all that well. I've gotten lines to come off it seems (or some of my snails are able to create random lines through the white cloudiness, but my scraper does not. At least not in a consistent way. There's streaks of paths where the whiteness is removed, but more there's very apparent white cloudiness areas.
Note, this is not the outside of the glass, it's definitely wet side. I've made my own amonia free glass cleaner on the outside and wiped it down really well and wiped it really well and no visible change in the white cloudiness.
My next step was to try a magic eraser on the wet side and see if something with some abrasiveness is able to clean it.
I'm assuming this is a chemistry issue with aging tanks and higher calcium levels, but curious what others' experiences are?