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-   -   Diatoms!!! (cross-posted) (http://www.fishkeepingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=17608)

SkyCatcher January 21st 05 04:44 PM

Diatoms!!! (cross-posted)
 
Hi,

I am troubled by difficult to remove diatoms (algae) in my lake Malawi
setup. This is made worse by the fact that it is a big tank 6ft long 5ft
deep and acrylic!

Anyone any suggestions/tips on shifting these without scratching the
acrylic? I'm currently using a Kent pro scraper/mop but the scraper is
occasionally scratching the acrylic and the mop wont budge the diatoms!

tia,

Sky



Rick January 21st 05 05:14 PM


"SkyCatcher" wrote in message
...
Hi,

I am troubled by difficult to remove diatoms (algae) in my lake Malawi
setup. This is made worse by the fact that it is a big tank 6ft long 5ft
deep and acrylic!

Anyone any suggestions/tips on shifting these without scratching the
acrylic? I'm currently using a Kent pro scraper/mop but the scraper is
occasionally scratching the acrylic and the mop wont budge the diatoms!

tia,

Sky

if it is the stuff that is easily removed you could either try one of the
algae magnets but be careful you do not pick up any grit at all or it will
scratch the tank terribly or perhaps a rubber squeegee.

Rick



Ali Day January 21st 05 05:20 PM

I am troubled by difficult to remove diatoms (algae) in my lake Malawi
setup. This is made worse by the fact that it is a big tank 6ft long 5ft
deep and acrylic!

Anyone any suggestions/tips on shifting these without scratching the
acrylic? I'm currently using a Kent pro scraper/mop but the scraper is
occasionally scratching the acrylic and the mop wont budge the diatoms!


Sorry I'm not the best expert, but aren't diatoms the ones that float in the
water, and give you green water, not the ones that coat the tank. Diatoms
can be got rid of by blacking the tank out for four days. Check your
phosphate levels as well. I caused mine a while back by leaving a carbon
pillow in too long, and it leeched loads of phosphates back into the tank.

A



SkyCatcher January 21st 05 06:06 PM

maybe I got the term wrong but it is the hard difficult to shift ones
attached to the acrylic - not free floating!


"Ali Day" wrote in message
...
I am troubled by difficult to remove diatoms (algae) in my lake Malawi
setup. This is made worse by the fact that it is a big tank 6ft long 5ft
deep and acrylic!

Anyone any suggestions/tips on shifting these without scratching the
acrylic? I'm currently using a Kent pro scraper/mop but the scraper is
occasionally scratching the acrylic and the mop wont budge the diatoms!


Sorry I'm not the best expert, but aren't diatoms the ones that float in
the
water, and give you green water, not the ones that coat the tank. Diatoms
can be got rid of by blacking the tank out for four days. Check your
phosphate levels as well. I caused mine a while back by leaving a carbon
pillow in too long, and it leeched loads of phosphates back into the tank.

A





SkyCatcher January 21st 05 06:08 PM

Rick,

Magnets appeal! But I haven't found any in the UK that will work through 1"
acrylic. Can you recommend any UK or US magnets that will work with 1"
acrylic and do a good job?

Sky.

"Rick" wrote in message
...

"SkyCatcher" wrote in message
...
Hi,

I am troubled by difficult to remove diatoms (algae) in my lake Malawi
setup. This is made worse by the fact that it is a big tank 6ft long 5ft
deep and acrylic!

Anyone any suggestions/tips on shifting these without scratching the
acrylic? I'm currently using a Kent pro scraper/mop but the scraper is
occasionally scratching the acrylic and the mop wont budge the diatoms!

tia,

Sky

if it is the stuff that is easily removed you could either try one of the
algae magnets but be careful you do not pick up any grit at all or it will
scratch the tank terribly or perhaps a rubber squeegee.

Rick





[email protected] January 21st 05 07:01 PM

On Fri, 21 Jan 2005 16:44:21 -0000, "SkyCatcher"
wrote:

Hi,

I am troubled by difficult to remove diatoms (algae) in my lake Malawi
setup. This is made worse by the fact that it is a big tank 6ft long 5ft
deep and acrylic!


If by Malawi you mean you have Mbuna then they will eat the algae for
you. They need to get hungry so cut the food for a few days.

If that doesn't work get some bristlenose catfish.


Steve
--
EasyNN-plus. The easy way to build neural networks.
http://www.easynn.com

Margolis January 21st 05 08:26 PM

"Ali Day" wrote in message
...

Sorry I'm not the best expert, but aren't diatoms the ones that float in

the
water, and give you green water, not the ones that coat the tank. Diatoms



no, diatoms are the fine brown stuff that grows on things. Looks like a
coating of dust, imo. Too much silicate in the water is one thing that
diatoms thrive on. I am not sure what else causes them.
--

Margolis
http://web.archive.org/web/200302152...qs/AGQ2FAQ.htm
http://www.unrealtower.org/faq





Margolis January 21st 05 08:27 PM

wrote in message
...
On Fri, 21 Jan 2005 16:44:21 -0000, "SkyCatcher"

If by Malawi you mean you have Mbuna then they will eat the algae for
you.



not diatoms

--

Margolis
http://web.archive.org/web/200302152...qs/AGQ2FAQ.htm
http://www.unrealtower.org/faq






Glenn January 21st 05 08:29 PM

These are pricey, but they are the best:
http://www.aquariumcleaner.com/products.html

Pay attention when you order, as they have pads for both glass and acrylic.


" Anyone any suggestions/tips on shifting these without scratching the
acrylic? I'm currently using a Kent pro scraper/mop but the scraper is
occasionally scratching the acrylic and the mop wont budge the diatoms!

tia,

Sky




Rick January 21st 05 09:58 PM


"SkyCatcher" wrote in message
...
maybe I got the term wrong but it is the hard difficult to shift ones
attached to the acrylic - not free floating!


"Ali Day" wrote in message
...
I am troubled by difficult to remove diatoms (algae) in my lake Malawi
setup. This is made worse by the fact that it is a big tank 6ft long

5ft
deep and acrylic!

Anyone any suggestions/tips on shifting these without scratching the
acrylic? I'm currently using a Kent pro scraper/mop but the scraper is
occasionally scratching the acrylic and the mop wont budge the diatoms!


Sorry I'm not the best expert, but aren't diatoms the ones that float in
the
water, and give you green water, not the ones that coat the tank.

Diatoms
can be got rid of by blacking the tank out for four days. Check your
phosphate levels as well. I caused mine a while back by leaving a carbon
pillow in too long, and it leeched loads of phosphates back into the

tank.

A




yeah I think I got the drift when you said you were scraping it with a
plastic scraper. I don't know too many people who scrape their water :-) and
sorry I don't know of a magnet that will work through 1: acrylic

Rick





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