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Opinion/help on my water
Hello all, I just got a glut of test kits in the mail, and have been finally able to test my water for most of the parameters, and I was wondering if someone could tell me if any of my values need improvment. For background, I have a 130L (3') tank w/ 2 30W tubes (10,000K and 18,000K), reasonably well planted (6 out of 10 are quick growers), 4 corys, 2 bristlenoses, and 8 neons (so far, but will be expanding, prolly some SAE's, corys and dwarf cichlids). 25% water change every 2 weeks, w/ DIY CO2 (yeast)... pH: 7.2 NO2: 0 kH: 4.48 gH: 7.28 (130ppm) Fe: ~0.25 ppm NH4: 0 PO4: off the Seachem chart (above 3). I think this is becasue I initially used discus buffer when I set up the tank a month ago. - BTW, how long will it take to drop it with my water changes and fast growing plants? - Is the gH too much for the intended fish/ plants? Thanks a bunch! (ha ha... ok. sorry. bad pun.) - Seweryn |
Opinion/help on my water
On Thu, 2 Oct 2003 16:59:13 +1000, "Seweryn" wrote:
could tell me if any of my values need improvment. For background, I have a 130L (3') tank w/ 2 30W tubes (10,000K and 18,000K), Not a particularly high-light tank.... reasonably well planted (6 out of 10 are quick growers), Do you have 10 species of plants, or 10 plants? In my mind, a "reasonably well planted" tank would have at least 50% of the substrate covered by plants. Many times, people think they have a well-planted or even heavily planted tank, and they really only approached my definition of lightly planted. 4 corys, 2 bristlenoses, and 8 neons (so far, but will be expanding, prolly some SAE's, corys and dwarf cichlids). 25% water change every 2 weeks, w/ DIY CO2 (yeast)... pH: 7.2 kH: 4.48 CO2 level is kind of low (8ppm by the CO2 chart). PO4: off the Seachem chart (above 3). I think this is becasue I initially used discus buffer when I set up the tank a month ago. - BTW, how long will it take to drop it with my water changes and fast growing plants? I'd personally just do a few large changes over a day or two and get rid of most of the phosphate problem.... gH: 7.28 (130ppm) - Is the gH too much for the intended fish/ plants? Definitely no problem for the neons, cories, plecos, or saes. Might be an issue for some dwarf cichlids. And some types of dwarf cichlids might be a problem for a planted tank (plant ripping, etc). And plants will definitely not complain about a high GH. That's just more Calcium and Magnesium available for them.... Chuck Gadd http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/aqua |
Opinion/help on my water
130L (3') tank w/ 2 30W tubes (10,000K and 18,000K),
Not a particularly high-light tank.... Would another 30W tube help much? ( I just used a standard fluoro light bar, whacked a frame and a u-shaped al-foil reflector around it and got some aquarium tubes) Do you have 10 species of plants, or 10 plants? Both actually :-) Although I split my novazealandea, and I just got another 3 small crypts in the mail. Right now it's about 34-40% covered, but I try to leave bare patches open for the corys and aesthetic reasons. Cheers, Seweryn |
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