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BtmDweller

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Posts posted by BtmDweller

  1. 2 hours ago, Origami said:

    I'm not familiar with the Hanna salinity meter. I have a Milwaukee electronic refractometer and a few handheld refractometers. If I looked hard enough, I might find my original Instant Ocean hydrometer.

    It sounds like the Hanna may be the issue here. Is this their handheld conductivity meter? How do you calibrate it? Any chance the calibration fluid is bad? Or, it was left open, it may be more concentrated, which could lead to low tank readings.

    It was brand new.  Initial calibration worked, calibrating in solution. I think it just needs constant calibration. The instructions say monthy or when high accuracy is needed.  

  2. 3 hours ago, Origami said:

    Get a temperature compensated refractometer and some quality calibration fluid that you can use to double check measurements. I never put my full trust in a single device.

    Your trusty old hydrometer may be giving you a better reading, but you can never tell. Plastic expands with temperature and some may absorb small amounts of water that can cause the indicator to swell or, conversely, shrink. This can cause measurement variation.

    Why you're getting such a wide variation between the Hanna and the refractometer is unknown. One of them is lying to you. Find another member nearby, or an LFS, that can check a water sample for you, to get another data point and proceed from there. The difference between the readings is too great to jump into making corrections now.

    Good points, one thing I do know is when I'm using the plastic hydrometer and not so recetly calibrated refratometer I'm getting the same numbers (for years) and corals are happy. But that defeats the purpose to have an easy dip and test.  I have cleaned the Hanna well with fresh water after each use.  Just hoped it would hold calibration longer. Awhile back did away with a Hanna Ca tester as well, and stick with salifert test kits. 

     

     

  3. Hey peoples, just wanted to share a recent issue I faced.  For starters I have used one of the cheap $10 Instant Ocean hydrometers for years (20+).  I have no idea how these can be near accurate, but it's worked for me.  I've been pleased to know it's cheap, easy, and has been reliable.  Reliable for me is any fluctuation within 1.021-1.024.  I have an apex, but could never get the salinity probe to calibrate, and have a hard time trusting it (calibrated several times with no success).  Maybe it's my tank, who knows.  Anyways, I started using a Hanna battery operated hydrometer just cause.  I've checked salinity for about two months following calibration, and during calibration checked against the instant ocean cheap $10 "dump in the tank plastic awesomeness" as well as a "hey I want to be a scientist" refractometer.  For the past couple months, the Hanna tester gave the same reading 30ppt/1.022-23 which was cool, until it wasn't.  Yes I could have calibrated it more often (I'm a lazy reefer, plus full time Master's student/work/housing projects). For the past few weeks I noticed some corals fade, including a 3 year old colony.  Initial thought ca/alk was off, checked more closely and adjusted slightly.  A little better, but still not great, so pull out the $10 hydrometer and my salinity was sitting at 1.016.  Again I'm not anal with salinity, but crap!  So now what?  Add a bunch of salt, but then the para swing a bit more (a lot more!) than I anticipated.  So what next?  Stop dosing, until it settles and hope for the best.  So far damage control minimal, lost a harder to keep acro mini colony, and a chalice isn't looking its best (not bad for 150+ frags and corals).  Maybe there's something in my tank throwing off calibration to the apex probe and Hanna, likely.  Just wanted to share the experience in the event it's helpful. 

     

     

  4. On 7/10/2020 at 11:38 AM, lowsingle said:

    Over the years I have had similar experiences, the worst for me was a group of bartletts anthias in my 150 deep dimension tank....one terrorized all the others to death than set out to terrorize all fish smaller than him.  In all, I would say he killed 5-7 fish.  Dang I hated that fish, but I couldn’t catch him without destroying my reef. I swore them off after him.....pretty though and very active.  Good luck!

     

    Darren

     

    Fish traps work well. Just make sure to enough fishing line and you can sit back and wait. Also, tricky fish may take a couple days or more until they go in. 

  5. I think Capital has them.  Not sure if their naughty behavior has been bred out of them. But at least they would be used to a confined environment and agreesion within a closed system. Still have an issue of transitioning from a large group of divided agression to just a few. 

  6. Depending on fish types. Most fish swim in relation to the reef. Sticking closer to the rock for food/protection.  Other larger fish such as tangs pick at the rocks and swim in large schools a little above the reef.  Many anthias will be found in the water column feeding.  They are sensitive to lights so certain ones have more difficulties in aquariums. So you may see them hiding. The lyretails that are becoming tank bred are a good option for looking for a fish that will be off the rockwork. 

     

    So long answer, but its more so relation to how close they are to the rockwork versus the water column.  In your case closing it down to inches they would likely stay closer to the rock/corals if only a couple inches to the surface.  Depending on fish type though. For example chromis and other fearless fish would move up the column closer to the surface. 

     

  7. I use a power head in each chamber to blow out detritus. They’re attached to a power strip and turned on a few times a week. You may need to beef up your skimmer if you’re getting protein buildup on the water surface. Also use of a filter sock can help.

  8. Thanks Dweller! My wife loves birds nest so it looks like the pink one is going on the right side of the tank. Maybe a rainbow on the left.
     
    I’m use to Duncan’s/hammers!
     
    When is a good time to get Acans in the tank to ensure they are successful and don’t die? I see they grow pretty slow, but they are very colorful.
     
     
    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

    Well if you’re doing a mixed reef start with the easier corals and gradually add. If you’ve kept duncans and hammers see how the do a little bit after cycling. The worst thing to do is rush and add everything. Maintaining long term stability is necessary. As mentioned for sps and a lot of lps water conditions become more important. Ca/Alk maintenance is key, quality rodi and water changes are also. It could be okay day one, but months later everything could crash. Also low bio loads makes things easier. If you are new to certain corals recommend to be environmentally responsible and find corals that are aquaculture versus taken from the wild. The ones mentioned are commonly aquacultured which you’ll see other members selling cheap or LFS carrying from companies like ORA and biota. What we do does have an impact on the ocean.
  9. I use a 300W Eheim Jager controlled by my Apex.  My total water volume is about 350 gallons.
     
    I've also used the Finnex heaters and have been happy with them too.  But I've seen too many DC8s with an outlet stuck on to feel comfortable giving the Apex total control over a big heater.  Might have to look into an inkbird controller too.

    Actually misread that. Stuck on. That’s not good. I’m also worried about temp probes. Haven’t had any issues, but thinking long term.
  10. I also know someone who lost half of his sps using a separated temp controller that got stuck on. The failures on the apex I wonder if it were to tripping the breaker? Too much plugged into the power bar. I’ve done that when not paying attention. Especially when some of the equipment may be off and turn on together at certain points. Or was it a different situation? I have trouble trusting technology as well. But I’m running a chiller and two heaters. Chiller covers issue of over heating. If apex shuts down both heaters, I don’t think the temp change will be that drastic and I could catch in time.

  11. Just wondering what heaters everyone is using and recommendations. I have two 500 watt finnex one primary and one backup connected to an apex. However, now my tank has been approaching 3 years replacing some equipment just in case. Total system volume is approximately 350 gallons.

  12. On 5/16/2020 at 12:18 PM, Jon Lazar said:

    My water station uses 2 55g drums.  I chose a Pan World NX-50PX-X (1110gph) for mixing and pumping, and plumbed the system with 1" plumbing because that's what the pump connections are sized for.  I'm happy with 1" for my setup, and would not do it smaller if I had to do it again.  I usually run the Pan World overnight when mixing a fresh batch of saltwater. 

     

    The pump is right-sized for mixing a 55g barrel of water and for pumping water.  I could go with a slightly larger pump, but not a smaller one.

     

    I believe Mag pumps have a reputation for leaking when used externally, but I have no experience with this.  What I DO know is that every Mag pump I've owned wears out in a couple years and I have to whack the pump to get it to start spinning.  I suspect this is due to impeller bearing wear, which allows the impeller to be get close to one of the magnetic field poles so it can't start.  

    I use a mag pump and the last one did leak, I put it under pressure though.  Gravity feed up to 150 gallons for long term periods.  This new mag pump has been holding for over a year.  Also, don't remember which part, but I had to use pipe dope to get it to seal. I could maybe have avoided that. 

  13. I purchased 2 WAV pumps to upgrade my flow. They arrived yesterday and I installed them. Installation was easy, but there is a loud high-pitched sound resonating from both pumps. The sound is only present when they are running. It is so bad that my ears were still ringing after leaving the room with the tank. I found a few posts online with similar issues, but no resolution on those forums. I experimented with them with no luck. I just emailed Neptune, but also wanted to see if anyone here experienced a similar issue. Hopefully the issue can be resolved as I do like them. I especially like no additional power bricks or controllers since they plug directly into my EB832.

    I’ve been running two WAVs for over two years. Haven’t touched them. No noise, tiny bit of humming at high levels. If a snail touches the pump it vibrates loudly. Other than that no issue. I’ve seen the reviews. Picked mine up used. Hopefully you can send them back.
  14. Sounds like we got our barrels from the same place. I don't want to even try to imagine what yours smelled like.
     
    I used bleach and even put in a gallon of muriatic acid and 10 gallons of water and let them sit on their side for a few weeks, helped a bit but not too much. 

    Haha yeah. Yup rotting olives and all!! Sounds like you cleaned yours well and riser the heck out of them. Mine had no issues at all, but yeah I think a faint smell. But very very faint.
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