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Fishless Cycling
I have read up on this and it sounds like a great approach. The ammonia I have is described as "clear" and the ingredients a purified water, ammonia and a
chelating agent. Does anyone know if the chelating agent would be a problem? Any hard core chemists or aquarists out there with the answer? Steve |
Fishless Cycling
Steve wrote:
I have read up on this and it sounds like a great approach. The ammonia I have is described as "clear" and the ingredients a purified water, ammonia and a chelating agent. Does anyone know if the chelating agent would be a problem? Any hard core chemists or aquarists out there with the answer? The chelating agent is probably EDTA or something similar. Don't worry too much because most tap water conditioners also have a chelating agent. It removes metals from solution and is fairly harmless. Besides, you *are* going to do a BIG water change once your tank is cycled, right? You'll end up with a ton of nitrate if it works and you don't want to add your fish with all that nitrate in there. Cheers--Jeff Dantzler |
Fishless Cycling
Thanks for the info. I did plan on doing a 50% water change. Should that
be enough? Steve "Jeff Dantzler" wrote in message news:1065138058.642077@yasure... Steve wrote: I have read up on this and it sounds like a great approach. The ammonia I have is described as "clear" and the ingredients a purified water, ammonia and a chelating agent. Does anyone know if the chelating agent would be a problem? Any hard core chemists or aquarists out there with the answer? The chelating agent is probably EDTA or something similar. Don't worry too much because most tap water conditioners also have a chelating agent. It removes metals from solution and is fairly harmless. Besides, you *are* going to do a BIG water change once your tank is cycled, right? You'll end up with a ton of nitrate if it works and you don't want to add your fish with all that nitrate in there. Cheers--Jeff Dantzler |
Fishless Cycling
In article w35fb.663532$YN5.511551@sccrnsc01, Steve
writes Thanks for the info. I did plan on doing a 50% water change. Should that be enough? There's actually no reason why you can't do a 100% water change if you want. It's not totally necessary, but fishless cycling often leads to very high levels of ammonia and nitrite in the water, so the more you change the better. You need to measure the levels in the water and see how much a 50% change would dilute them. If that's sufficient, then OK. It depends on how much seed you put in in the first place. Bear in mind that only a very small percentage of the bacteria live in the water, so you won't do any harm by changing more and you may save your fish from a nasty death. HTH -- Alan Silver |
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