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RadMax8

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Posts posted by RadMax8

  1. How long are you letting the food stay in there before they won't eat it? Is it a deal where they don't touch it at all and after 5 mins you take it out, or does it just sit in the tank for an extended period of time and it breaks down itself?

    In my experience, my cories eat just about anything. Granted, they definitely have preferences. Hikari bottom feeder wafers? Love them! Xtreme bottom feeder wafers? Meh... That said, they do get eaten, especially if I let them soften til lights out. Everything is cleaned up and good to go a couple hours later.

    I also like to let them explore their natural behaviors; I'll bury a cube of frozen bloodworms just barely under the substrate and let them snuffle around and find it. It's very fun to watch, especially as they try to get the last bits.

    Good luck!

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  2. To help limit fungus issues in the future, I've heard that you can put a couple cherry shrimp in with the eggs and they will eat the eggs with fungus, but not the viable eggs. Might be worth a shot if you're going to separate the eggs from the parents. Plus, the shrimp can help keep the tank a bit cleaner in general.

    Good luck!

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  3. On 8/16/2023 at 11:02 AM, Seattle_Aquarist said:

    Hi @RadMax8

    Glad to confirm your calcium / magnesium calculations.  I run a 'split photoperiod' on my four (4) tanks of 9:00 - 11:00 in the morning and 7:00 - 9:30 in the evenings for a total of 5-1/2 hours with no plant growth issues, and I only have one light per tank not running at full output.  It's only been been a week but how are your plants looking?  I usually only make an adjust one a month and then judge the results.

    As for measuring my CO2 I use a drop check with a 4.0 dKH indicator solution.  I've used several types of drop checkers over the years my current favorite is the Fluval shown below.  I run my CO2 24/7 and maintain a range of 20 - 30 ppm of CO2.  Hope this helps! -Roy
     

    Roy, so funny enough, I hit a bit of a busy patch (three kids five and under will do that...) and I didn't get to refill my fertilizer reservoir. I had initially calculated my ferts would run out around July 30th, with probably a week or so in reserve. Well, it's been three weeks and I think a few of my plants are actually reacting better to more lean nutrients. All my hygro still looks like I'm low on potassium (still dosing 40ppm at water changes though... go figure!), but my bacopa, ambulia, and blyxa have all been growing well, and my GDA has seemed to clear up a bit (it was not really too noticeable except in that closeup to me!). My plan is to cut back on other nutrient this next batch, likely iron because I never have iron levels below 0.50ppm before water changes. I have also made another change to a different light setup. I know, changing more things than once. I do use a drop checker to monitor CO2... I think I was at a higher range than you but I've backed down a bit.

    On 8/17/2023 at 5:20 AM, Pepere said:

    It bears mentioning that there are four different variations of the Finnex Planted Plus 24/7 with very different intensities and even wavelengths. As well as a planted plus without the 24/7 timer.  The 24/7 timer is a hot mess…

    And using the 24/7 timer on it is abysmal with a 3 hour ramp from setting to setting.  Running these lights in 24/7 mode with a Split photoperiod is an exercise in futility with the three hour ramp period.

     I have 1 KLC that I bought by accident before I understood the differences and the light output is anemic compared to my ALCs, and the red is truly disappointing…

    I do not use the 24/7 timer included with the lights.  I set a programmed lighting setting with 100% red, 50% green 20% blue and then bring the whites up to desired intensity.  

    Pepere, I had two of the Finnex lights on my tank, it was purchased before there were four options! The light would be analogous to the KLC... No 660nm lights, regular housing, 24/7 timer. I learned long ago to ditch the 24/7 mode and instead I used a smart outlet to control my photo period. Shocked the fish a bit, but it worked. 

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  4. It’s an aesthetic thing… a background helps hide the wall and all the wires behind your tank. Also, it can provide a sense of comfort for your fish. One less area to have to worry about predators. Plus, fish who tend to change color based on surroundings typically show better colors in darker environments. 

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  5. @Seattle_Aquarist Thanks for confirming my calculations on my calcium and magnesium... I was going off a German-language site and doing my best to understand the translation.

    In regards to reducing my photoperiod, I would be taking it from 8 hours a day to 5 and a half... That seems awfully short to me. Or am I just putting too much light in?

    I will look to increase my PO4 dosing and see if I can stop the GSA. It's not awful in the tank, but it's not great either.

    The reason I am pushing so much CO2 is because certain people in the planted tank realm are really subscribed to the "never enough CO2" theory *cough tom barr cough*  and so I thought, ok I'm getting weird growth and BBA, must increase CO2. My fish are ok with that much gas, so I guess I thought more is better. pH drop is a way to control how much CO2 you have in solution, right?

    Thanks for taking the time to work through this with me!

  6. On 8/7/2023 at 3:20 PM, SkaleyAquatics said:

    I don't think you have a deficency based on the numbers you are saying but plants are showing it. I am wondering if you are getting an issue of nutrient uptake from another nutrient. Mulder's Chart is what I am referring to:

    image.jpeg.e31e98300cd861cfa7a51ca505a59e9d.jpeg

    That is quite the eye test. I will need to study that to understand it a bit better. Is there a link to an article that this came from? Thank you!

    On 8/7/2023 at 3:30 PM, Mmiller2001 said:

    What’s the TDS?

    Dug out my (nearly forgotten) TDS meter and it looks like I'm about 390 ppm in the tank, which seems a bit high. I think a full filter clean is due. The tap water measured at 140 ppm

    On 8/7/2023 at 4:08 PM, JoeQ said:

    As someone who recently abandoned retrying the 24/7 I'd blame the light!!! Lousy instructions, wayyyyyyy too much blue light (see all that black beard on lower leaves) and as a whole, not customizable enough.

    I am looking to make a change; the light doesn't have the 680nm red LEDs that people seem to have nice success with, plus I'm not wild about the way the plants and fish look.

    On 8/7/2023 at 5:37 PM, Seattle_Aquarist said:

    Hi @RadMax8

    Looking at the pictures I agree that either the light intensity and/or the photoperiod needs to be reduced.

    In addition, the cupping of leaves as they mature would indicate an issue with insufficient available magnesium.  The spots of necrosis on the older leaves of the S. repens would indicate an issue with insufficient available potassium.  And lastly the Green Spot Algae (GSA) indicates an insufficient available issue with phosphorus.  Notice I said "insufficient available " and not that the amount being dosed is inadequate.

    This could all relate to the antagonistic relationship of calcium with all three of those nutrients.  In other words the excess calcium may be effecting the uptake of the other three nutrients.  Could you please give me the current dGH and ppm of calcium of your tap water?  Thank you, -Roy

    Recent measurement of my tap water was a GH of 7 and my calcium is between 38-43 ppm per the water department. I use 40 ppm as a good calculation that can be confirmed roughly by my API test kit.

  7. Hello, and welcome to everyone's favorite gameshow... NAME THAT DEFICIENCY! I'm your host RadMax8. Please join along as I describe a tank and what's going into it, then show some photos and then you can NAME THAT DEFICIENCY!
    Tank Equipment:
    Aqueon 40b
    Two Original Finnex Planted+ 24/7 set to run 8 hours a day
    CO2 injection with a Griggs reactor and a Milwaukee controller
    Fluval 407 Filter
    Parameters:
    Temp - 79F
    pH - 7.0 dropping to 5.8 with full CO2
    dGH - 12
    dKH - 5
    NO3 - 20 ppm
    PO4 - 2 ppm
    Fe - .58 ppm
    Ca - 40-60 ppm (tap is about 40)
    Dosing:
    Macros and Micros dosed 3x per week alternating days. Values shown per dose.
    CO2 - 30+ ppm
    PO4 - 1.4 ppm
    K - 9 ppm per does plus 40 ppm added at water changes
    Fe - .12 ppm via Plant-Prod Micro Mix with trace amount of Mn added
    Mg - 12 ppm added at water changes (Ca:Mg ratio is at about 3:1)

    My plants show signs of Calcium deficiency (AR and Ludwigia) as well as Potassium (any Hygrophila and my Staur repens). My parameters and dosing seem to indicate otherwise. What is going on here? Thanks for your help!

    IMG_6789.JPG.d213cfefebb48666b5df4d35e2d49b21.JPG

    IMG_6790.JPG.6184e4bd28e8141cb88d91e40747bf9e.JPG

    IMG_6791.JPG.287b0c84e901a3c702f52332653270a6.JPG

     

  8. On 2/21/2023 at 7:11 PM, Plantdude said:

    the bugs in the picture look like bugs, they are not that long, and have legs spread out, not all in one area.

    I may be wrong, but I believe they are attached to the glass we are looking through, so we just see a green dot and some “legs”. Towards the right side of the photo there are some classic hydra shapes. 

  9. On 2/19/2023 at 12:52 PM, Monkeypoint said:

    By seasoned, I'm assuming you mean fully cycled. Do I need to add substrate or would they be good with just plants? Thanks for the help!

    Cycled and given enough time to grow some biofilm. Shrimp don’t do well in “young” tanks typically. 

    Just plants should work ok, even better if you’ve had them growing submersed, again so they’ve had time to grow algae and biofilm. 

  10. Honestly I don’t think you can go wrong with either… Super Green is vegan, so no meat. Soilent Green has some people… I mean animal protein in it. 

    Keep in mind, even though we think of Otocinclus as algae eaters, they actually feed on a lot of biofilm, which is bacteria and such. 

    I guess what I’m saying is, either one is good. Your Otos will get nutrition from a combo of the food and the goodies in your tank. 

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  11. I’ve got a tank full of CPDs and a couple weeks back two fish came down with what I thought was dropsy. Bloated, pine cone scales; classic hallmarks. Into hospital tank they went. I added salt and dosed with Kanaplex. No change. I went on vacation and when I came back, one fish was in bad shape and the other one wasn’t too hot either. And a third was affected in the main tank. This one isn’t bloated like the others were, but the scales were pushed out just the same. 

    Is there anything else I can do for these fish, or should I euthanize when I see symptoms. 

  12. Those are likely pond or bladder snails. If you like snails in your tank, they will multiply if they can find some food. If you don’t, you can squish them and give your fish a snack or remove them manually and chuck them. Have any friends with puffers or loaches? Those fish will eat them up!

    In regards to the swimming thing… what does it look like? A worm, a speck, something else? How does it swim; jerky, wiggly, smoothly with purpose?

  13. Aqua Huna ships them young. Make sure you give them a low-stress, well-fed, clean environment to grow and develop in!

    Last time I bought a batch at my LFS I paid $45 for six of them, or $7.50 per. I think they had them listed at $8 per. From my understanding, they are relatively easy to breed and raise, the main issue is volumes. These aren’t fish that are popping out a few hundred eggs a day. Hm, seeing these prices maybe I need to invest in breeding these bad boys…

    • Like 1
  14. @MattyM it’s also known as dry ferts, basically you’re taking the stuff that’s in the Seachem bottle pans adding it directly to your tank, rather than buying it mixed with water from Seachem. K2SO4 I believe is the common compound that most of us use. You can get a pound of the stuff for what it costs a single bottle of Seachem. 

    I’m by no means bashing on Seachem, it’s fine for beginners and folks who don’t want the hassle of dealing with various chemicals and measurements and Seachem provides a premixed solution. But if you really want to dial things in and save money doing it, dry ferts is the way to go!

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  15. I’ve got a 20L with a bunch of CPDs and Red Cherry Shrimp. I do my water changes the old fashioned way… just have a regular siphon and do about 5 gallons at a time. If a fish or shrimp get into the “bell” of the siphon, I gently kink the hose and let them swim out. They’re usually aware that something isn’t right. If they do end up taking a ride, I’ll net them after I’m done. I use a white bucket now so they’re easy to see. 

    Hope this helps!

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  16. I wouldn’t put the API in, it’s active ingredient is gluteraldahyde and that can be harmful for crypts. Otherwise, I think you’re on the right track with removing the worst affected leaves and the changes to your lighting schedule. I’ve also had really good luck getting rid of BBA by spot treating with peroxide. Might take a couple treatments but it will eventually turn red and die. 

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  17. When you say shorted, what happened? Did the filter spark or indicate there was a catastrophic failure?

    I know sometimes the impeller will get “stuck” and not spin unless you take a straw (or other soft poking tool) and move the impeller out of that spot. Then it will start working again. 

    If you’ve noted a catastrophic failure, I wouldn’t try this though. If it’s just sitting there humming instead of working, give the other method a shot. 

    Sorry that this happened for you!

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