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#1
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![]() "Pszemol" wrote in message ... In your last resort, when you really use them a lot, you can do mixed resin separation yourself, recharge them, and mix them back. I have found an article somewhere on the net describing the process but do not remember where was it exactly. What phosphate remover & heavy metal sponge do you use? Is this the article you refering to, Pszemol? http://archimedes.galilei.com/raiar/ditwp.html CapFusion,.... |
#2
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"CapFusion" CapeFussion...@hotmail.., com wrote in message ...
In your last resort, when you really use them a lot, you can do mixed resin separation yourself, recharge them, and mix them back. I have found an article somewhere on the net describing the process but do not remember where was it exactly. Is this the article you refering to, Pszemol? http://archimedes.galilei.com/raiar/ditwp.html Yes, this is it - thank you... I should be better organized ;-) |
#3
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"Simon O'Keeffe" wrote in message ...
So IMO give micro algae a go, You'lll find it can remove nutrients up to 10 times faster on average than most macros and is more stable and provides a home for a larger quantity of inverts than the same area of macro. It's all good with micro algae. Green hair algae is macro-algae too... They call micro-algae only unicellular algae, green water. You do not see people growing green hair algae for the risk of introducing this stuff into the main tank - it looks ugly and smothers delicate corals in your tank... How do you keep hair algae to stay in your trays? |
#4
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![]() It come back to conditions. The conditions in the algae grow area are preferd by algae so it grows there, there is also a lack of competition. So when the main tank is grazed the nutrients end up in the algae filter instead of back in the main tank. Every tank with LR has hair algae spores, almost every surface in your tank will have hair algae on it already. If your tank is healthy and your grazers are keeping up you'll never see any hair algae on your rocks, but this does not mean it's not there. My Algae filter strips the nutrients from the water, in such an efficient manner that there is not enough nutrients left to grow a visible amount pf algae in the main tank. Lighting times spectrum and intensity are your weapons, and if used correctly the hair algae is your best friend in the tank, I can't believe experienced reefers are still scared of hair algae. If you have a decent algae filter there is no way that the hair algae could over take the main tank as there are just too few nutrients left, for decent growth. In one of my 4x2x2 tanks I run a 1000w MH (14k corallights) and there is only a single hermit in the tank for grazing, there is very little visible algae in the tank, and yet I still pull heaps out of the ATS every fortnight. The other 4x2x2 I run 2 x 400w MH and this tank has only a collector urchin for grazing. There is no visible algae in this tank, only really strong coraline growth. Also GHA is not a macro algae, micro- algae covers algae with no vascular system AFAIK. Most of the varietys are single cells but strands of cells are also in this group. Learn to use algae and dont be afraid of it, once you can grow it where you want life is just too easy. Well over 5 years later and I'm still very happy with my decision to go with micro algae. I'll never run a tank without some kind of micro algae filter. Simon Pszemol wrote: "Simon O'Keeffe" wrote in message ... So IMO give micro algae a go, You'lll find it can remove nutrients up to 10 times faster on average than most macros and is more stable and provides a home for a larger quantity of inverts than the same area of macro. It's all good with micro algae. Green hair algae is macro-algae too... They call micro-algae only unicellular algae, green water. You do not see people growing green hair algae for the risk of introducing this stuff into the main tank - it looks ugly and smothers delicate corals in your tank... How do you keep hair algae to stay in your trays? |
#5
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![]() "Simon O'Keeffe" wrote in message ... It come back to conditions. The conditions in the algae grow area are preferd by algae so it grows there, there is also a lack of competition. So when the main tank is grazed the nutrients end up in the algae filter instead of back in the main tank. Every tank with LR has hair algae spores, almost every surface in your tank will have hair algae on it already. If your tank is healthy and your grazers are keeping up you'll never see any hair algae on your rocks, but this does not mean it's not there. My Algae filter strips the nutrients from the water, in such an efficient manner that there is not enough nutrients left to grow a visible amount pf algae in the main tank. Lighting times spectrum and intensity are your weapons, and if used correctly the hair algae is your best friend in the tank, I can't believe experienced reefers are still scared of hair algae. If you have a decent algae filter there is no way that the hair algae could over take the main tank as there are just too few nutrients left, for decent growth. In one of my 4x2x2 tanks I run a 1000w MH (14k corallights) and there is only a single hermit in the tank for grazing, there is very little visible algae in the tank, and yet I still pull heaps out of the ATS every fortnight. The other 4x2x2 I run 2 x 400w MH and this tank has only a collector urchin for grazing. There is no visible algae in this tank, only really strong coraline growth. Also GHA is not a macro algae, micro- algae covers algae with no vascular system AFAIK. Most of the varietys are single cells but strands of cells are also in this group. Learn to use algae and dont be afraid of it, once you can grow it where you want life is just too easy. Well over 5 years later and I'm still very happy with my decision to go with micro algae. I'll never run a tank without some kind of micro algae filter. Simon Yeap, this should be the way how it work. Using natural way to remove nutrient. Experience Reefer should not be scared of algae but know how to use it to reefer advantage. CapFusion,.... |
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