A
Anonymous
Guest
Hi. I admit; I had a huge diatom (aka. brown algae) problem. However in just 7 days I am now looking at a snow white sandy substrate, clean glass and diminishing green/brown hairs. It has been getting steadily better over the past few days and today is my first official day that I would say that I have conquered it. Here's a chronological account.
1. Instead of spending my money on a "clean-up-crew" I decided to attack the source of the problem so I bought a RO/DI unit 2 months ago (Spectrapure). I did numerous massive water changes, even did a 99% water change, but every time, after a couple of days my rocks and sand would be brown again.
2. I suffered through several months of agony, scraping the glass carefully, syphoning the sand and washing it in the bathtub, but every time the brown diatoms grew back after 2 or 3 days. Huge mats of thick brown masses killing my corals and over running my coraline algae...
3. Bought PhosGuard. Dumped a bunch in my "media filter", but this did absolutely nothing to clean up the problem. Did the same with Coralife Silicate removing compound and nothing worked at all.
4. Researched diatoms and found that they will only grow if they have silicate *and* phosphate. So I researched silicate/phosphate removing compounds and what I found out greatly surprised me.
I had been using PhosGuard wrong. Here is how to PROPERLY use a phosphate/silicate removing compound.
YOU CAN'T JUST DUMP IT IN YOUR "CHEMICAL MEDIA FILTER" AND HOPE THAT IT REMOVES THE PHOS/SIL. IT WON'T!
The chemical is Aluminum Oxide. When placed in your tank water, it causes the silicate and phosphate ions to clump together. That's all it does. IT DOES NOT REMOVE THEM. You have to do this yourself using mechanical filter paper. I used some paper towels which I folded up and placed directly "downstream" of the PhosGuard. I have Emperor 400 and found it's chemical media holders to be perfect for this. Just sandwich the paper towels between the media plates and aim them so that the water flows first over the PhosGuard, then into the paper towel which traps the phosphate & silicate ions.
Change the paper towels ever 12-24 hours, and change the PhosGuard every 12-24 hours at first and then every 24-36 hours after about 6 days. I ended up using 2Liters (1.2Kg) of PhosGuard to clean my 75g tank.
After about 2 days of use, give your tank the usual wiping of the glass and syphon/wash the sand. Do this perhaps once more in a couple of days.
Go easy at first. It does take time. It took me about 8 days to TOTALLY get rid of my diatom problem. It seems that consistantly using small/medium amounts does as much good as dumping massive amounts of PhosGuard. So why waste it. Just be patient.
-----------------------
In retrospect here are some reasons why I believe that I had diatom problems:
1. Filthy "city" water (New Jersey, near Philadelphia) full of silicate and phosphate. My DI cartrige is already exhaused and I only made about 300g of water!!! This shows that my source water has lots of impurities. My micron filter is BLACK after only 300g of use. Perhaps some of this pollution is fallout from hurricane Floyd which battered parts of New Jersey a couple of months ago.
2. I didn't over feed my fish. I fed very sparingly thinking it was *my* fault that I had a bloom, but it really was the polluted "city" water.
In the future I will have to run my RO water through some additional DI cartriges. I may make them myself using multiple numerous layers of aluminum oxide/paper towel. This will remove the phosphate and silicate from my top off water.
Well if any of you have questions about this feel free to reply or you could e-mail me:
[email protected]
I will not be here next week (first week of the new millenium).
Good luck with all your reefings!!!
-Nathan Morris
[This message has been edited by Nathan (edited 28 December 1999).]
1. Instead of spending my money on a "clean-up-crew" I decided to attack the source of the problem so I bought a RO/DI unit 2 months ago (Spectrapure). I did numerous massive water changes, even did a 99% water change, but every time, after a couple of days my rocks and sand would be brown again.
2. I suffered through several months of agony, scraping the glass carefully, syphoning the sand and washing it in the bathtub, but every time the brown diatoms grew back after 2 or 3 days. Huge mats of thick brown masses killing my corals and over running my coraline algae...
3. Bought PhosGuard. Dumped a bunch in my "media filter", but this did absolutely nothing to clean up the problem. Did the same with Coralife Silicate removing compound and nothing worked at all.
4. Researched diatoms and found that they will only grow if they have silicate *and* phosphate. So I researched silicate/phosphate removing compounds and what I found out greatly surprised me.
I had been using PhosGuard wrong. Here is how to PROPERLY use a phosphate/silicate removing compound.
YOU CAN'T JUST DUMP IT IN YOUR "CHEMICAL MEDIA FILTER" AND HOPE THAT IT REMOVES THE PHOS/SIL. IT WON'T!
The chemical is Aluminum Oxide. When placed in your tank water, it causes the silicate and phosphate ions to clump together. That's all it does. IT DOES NOT REMOVE THEM. You have to do this yourself using mechanical filter paper. I used some paper towels which I folded up and placed directly "downstream" of the PhosGuard. I have Emperor 400 and found it's chemical media holders to be perfect for this. Just sandwich the paper towels between the media plates and aim them so that the water flows first over the PhosGuard, then into the paper towel which traps the phosphate & silicate ions.
Change the paper towels ever 12-24 hours, and change the PhosGuard every 12-24 hours at first and then every 24-36 hours after about 6 days. I ended up using 2Liters (1.2Kg) of PhosGuard to clean my 75g tank.
After about 2 days of use, give your tank the usual wiping of the glass and syphon/wash the sand. Do this perhaps once more in a couple of days.
Go easy at first. It does take time. It took me about 8 days to TOTALLY get rid of my diatom problem. It seems that consistantly using small/medium amounts does as much good as dumping massive amounts of PhosGuard. So why waste it. Just be patient.
-----------------------
In retrospect here are some reasons why I believe that I had diatom problems:
1. Filthy "city" water (New Jersey, near Philadelphia) full of silicate and phosphate. My DI cartrige is already exhaused and I only made about 300g of water!!! This shows that my source water has lots of impurities. My micron filter is BLACK after only 300g of use. Perhaps some of this pollution is fallout from hurricane Floyd which battered parts of New Jersey a couple of months ago.
2. I didn't over feed my fish. I fed very sparingly thinking it was *my* fault that I had a bloom, but it really was the polluted "city" water.
In the future I will have to run my RO water through some additional DI cartriges. I may make them myself using multiple numerous layers of aluminum oxide/paper towel. This will remove the phosphate and silicate from my top off water.
Well if any of you have questions about this feel free to reply or you could e-mail me:
[email protected]
I will not be here next week (first week of the new millenium).
Good luck with all your reefings!!!
-Nathan Morris
[This message has been edited by Nathan (edited 28 December 1999).]