SWPlantedTank
Active member
Here we can get a printout of our citys water on the city's website. It is public record information. The EPA watches it....
Google your citys website....
Google your citys website....
copepod said:The problem I see with that is, a TDS meter doesn't really mean much. I have one and I have a 5 stage rodi unit. Coming out of the unit is 0 ppm. But if I let the water sit it somehow will register some on the TDS. 035 So that means it is picking stuff up in the bucket? Left over additives perhaps. I think I would need to check for specific things like nitrate etc. instead.
The reason I asked this question to begin with is because I have a 5 stage and yet I have fought red hair algae twice. Searching everything I could about that I have it narrowed down to three causes. Old di resin, disturbing my tank both times, and/or adding carbon. I always run my tanks without carbon but when I changed things around a couple of times I stuck some in a bag in my sump to help with anything I might have released while disturbing the sand bed. And both times I have done this I got an outbreak of Red hair a few days later. Now I have found out that even most carbon that says phosphate free will still release large amounts of phosphate. So that could be the problem. Or it could just simply be due to my disturbing everything.
Anyway, I am just really curious as to how many are using non filtered water successfully.
moortim said:If using a TDS meter doesn't mean much then why does everyone use them?
Tim
copepod said:People use them to test the RO filter and if it needs replacing. Otherwise I am not sure why they are using them. Maybe I am missing something. But it will not tell me if my water has nitrates, phosphates, copper, etc. in it. So when I say it doesn't mean much, I meant when it comes to knowing if water from the tap is safe or not.
So it is just telling me how many dissolved solids (good bad or otherwise) are in the water.
moortim said:Since we are discussing the use of tap water in a tank I would think that testing the TDS would be a good indication of whether or not you might run into problems.
Tim
copepod said:The bigger problem I see with saltwater is since I am adding a salt mix that has been balanced I don't want to throw that balance out with something that might be in the tap water. Of course, the other side of the argument could be that over time the salt mixes will lack something found in nature. It does seem however that many people are succesfully using tap water.
Personally, if I lived in Seattle I would join the aquarium club for their filtered ocean water.
copepod said:Personally, if I lived in Seattle I would join the aquarium club for their filtered ocean water.
moortim said:Now we are going back onto what works for one person does not work for another..........
Which I see as one of the more frustrating parts of this hobby.
moortim said:Yeah that would be kind of hard to compare, what do your tap water parameters look like?
Tim
We have a river here in Spokane too! Full of mercury from years of mining runoff in the silver valley. They have signs all over telling not to eat the fish out of the river, sad.copepod said:I think we do a lot better than Spokane because of the two rivers here
Arsenic (ppb) <2 Erosion of natural deposits & runoff from
orchards
Conductivity 161 Erosion of natural deposits
Fluoride (ppm) <0.5 Erosion of natural deposits
Nitrate (ppm) <0.5 Erosion of natural deposits, runoff from
fertilizer use, & leaching from septic tanks
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