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got my DKH steady by dosing CA to about 550-600ppm inadvertently while
adding an occasional superbuffer, then when i finally got a CA tester, i stopped adding it cold turkey. i was using TurboCalc. I havent added CA in my tank for over a month. I add about 15ml of superbuffer a day, while i watch my DKH rise, when it got to 9.8DKH, i stopped adding it in every day, now its just like 2-4 times a week i add Kents SuperBuffer. Thats it. I have 1/1/2 DSB which also reacts and alot of rock which also reacts with the buffering of the tank. ALSO good quality salt will to. YOU ARE using Professional Marine Grade salt right? IF not, theres may be your problem. WH "Craig Bingman" wrote in message ... In article , Reef Man wrote: Hi, I´ve been fighting hair algae for a year. I tried everything, then i found my KH was too low (4,5 dkh) and calcium too high (550). I tried to put things right. So i stopped adding kalk and started dosing Seachem's Reefbuilder. I had to dose lots of this product to reach 8 dkh, but, when i stopped dosing it just for one day, dkh fell around 1 or 2 dkh. Then I realised calcium fell to 280, so i restarted dosing kalk through my kalkwasser reactor. Now calcium levels are fine at 420 and i still can't get my alkalinity higher than 7,5 dkh. I stopped dosing Reefbuilder and i am now dosing C-Balance: 30 ml part A daily 60 ml part B daily (I want to get my alkalinity to 10 dkh and mantain my calcium levels) I think that 7.5 dKH is plenty high enough. You are trying to chase numbers that aren't necessarily realistic. You won't necessarily be able to resolve a hair algae problem by only working on calcium and alkalinity numbers. Adequate calcium and alkalinity is a prerequisite for good coralline algae growth in a system, but there are a number of other biological and chemical issues at play here. You need appropriate herbivores in the system, you generally need a good meiofauna population, and you need to get a handle on any excess nutrients in the tank before you will be able to resolve a nuisance algae issue. -- -- |
#2
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Thanks for your answers.
Craig is right about my herbivores population. I have just some 8 hermit crabs in a 180g reef tank and no snails. However, i have a minimum nutrient level because there's only 4 small fish that are becoming thiner ![]() I'm using 2 litres of Rowaphos just to be sure all phosphate is removed. IS it possible that the DSB is acidifying the water and consuming alkalinity? The DSB is Aragamax 4" - 5" deep and i think it is clogging with a hard sand layer on the top with some brown microalgae. Deep layers are grey and smely (is this normal?). I used Instant Ocean salt mix and changed 3 months ago to Red Sea Salt hoping things would get better, but it didn't improve. Any advices on a better salt mix? Any advices on a netter action plan? Thank you all Reefman "wolfhedd" wrote in message link.net... got my DKH steady by dosing CA to about 550-600ppm inadvertently while adding an occasional superbuffer, then when i finally got a CA tester, i stopped adding it cold turkey. i was using TurboCalc. I havent added CA in my tank for over a month. I add about 15ml of superbuffer a day, while i watch my DKH rise, when it got to 9.8DKH, i stopped adding it in every day, now its just like 2-4 times a week i add Kents SuperBuffer. Thats it. I have 1/1/2 DSB which also reacts and alot of rock which also reacts with the buffering of the tank. ALSO good quality salt will to. YOU ARE using Professional Marine Grade salt right? IF not, theres may be your problem. WH "Craig Bingman" wrote in message ... In article , Reef Man wrote: Hi, I´ve been fighting hair algae for a year. I tried everything, then i found my KH was too low (4,5 dkh) and calcium too high (550). I tried to put things right. So i stopped adding kalk and started dosing Seachem's Reefbuilder. I had to dose lots of this product to reach 8 dkh, but, when i stopped dosing it just for one day, dkh fell around 1 or 2 dkh. Then I realised calcium fell to 280, so i restarted dosing kalk through my kalkwasser reactor. Now calcium levels are fine at 420 and i still can't get my alkalinity higher than 7,5 dkh. I stopped dosing Reefbuilder and i am now dosing C-Balance: 30 ml part A daily 60 ml part B daily (I want to get my alkalinity to 10 dkh and mantain my calcium levels) I think that 7.5 dKH is plenty high enough. You are trying to chase numbers that aren't necessarily realistic. You won't necessarily be able to resolve a hair algae problem by only working on calcium and alkalinity numbers. Adequate calcium and alkalinity is a prerequisite for good coralline algae growth in a system, but there are a number of other biological and chemical issues at play here. You need appropriate herbivores in the system, you generally need a good meiofauna population, and you need to get a handle on any excess nutrients in the tank before you will be able to resolve a nuisance algae issue. -- -- |
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