Part 1 of 2
2 Weeks Overload At the LFS!
One day I was in my LFS, and he was complaining of N and P being "crazy high" in one of his FO retail displays. I looked at what he was currently doing for filtration... G4 skimmer, bio balls, Phosban reactor, 2 Ocean Clear mechanical filters, and a UV on a 300 gal FO display, and he is feeding 16 cubes a day. He is currently building a custom acrylic waterfall box turf filter like I outlined in the first page of my RC post, but it's not finished yet. He says he has to keep N and P under control by changing 100g every two weeks. The bio balls seem mostly under water; to me, that would reduce their power. Also he thinks he might need to remove the mechanical filters.
Since my bucket-build thread was done, and since I completed the pics of it for the first week, I thought it was wasting its potential trying to filter my 90 since my 90 also has the original pre-grown turf bucket already working. So I asked the LFS guy if he'd like to borrow my bucket. He said yes, so I went right away to get it, and told him to measure N and P meanwhile. I had to wrap the screen in wet towels to keep it from drying out, but otherwise the whole bucket was light and easy to carry in the car. When I got there he showed me his test (Red Sea, I think), and they were deep dark colors. But I wanted to use Salifert so they'd correspond with my tank, so I used my kits to measure: N = 50, P = Off the chart (very deep dark blue). His main goal was to stop the daily rise in N and P, especially N, which had been rising an average of 1 per day.
So we set the bucket on top of his sump so it would just drain down, and hooked up one of his pumps to the waterfall pipe (no wavemaker timer), and hooked up the lights to one of his timers (18 hours on), and away it went. Here are the day-by-day measurements:
....................N...........P.............Comment
.
day 1..........50...........1.5+............
day 2..........50...........1.5+............
day 3..........50...........1.5+............
day 4..........50...........1.5+.........Cleaned; Iron added
day 5..........*............*...............Not measured; Original diatoms gone
day 6..........*............*...............Not measured; Waiting for WC
day 7..........*............*...............Not measured; he did 100g WC
day 8..........50...........1.5+.........WC did almost nothing, N and P same
day 9..........45?..........1.5+.........Screen about 75% full
day 10.........45...........1.5+.........Screen about 80% full
day 11..........*............*..............Store Closed Labor Day
day 12..........*............*..............Store Closed
day 13.........40?..........1.5+........95% full; bottom completely full
day 14.........35!..........1.5+........Starting to develop spots; Cleaned
And here are the pics. Note that the in-bucket pics were done with the water still flowing, since after crawling under wooden beams to get to the bucket, I had forgotten to unplug the pump; so thereafter all pics needed the pump running so they would match:
First, here is the left half of the display, and the right half (all are one system connected together):
. . . .
Here's the bio balls in the sump; Note high water level:
[pic limit]
Hi-Res:
http://www.radio-media.com/fish/LFSbioBalls.jpg
His G4 skimmer and Phosban reactor:
[pic limit]
His mechanical filters:
[pic limit]
Here's the bucket as delivered, with screen wrapped to stay wet:
The bucket was put behind the wood shelves, on top of the sump, between the tanks:
Day 0: This is the screen as delivered, after the one-week test thread was finished:
Hi-Res:
http://www.radio-media.com/fish/LFSscreenDay00.jpg
Day 1, Cleaned bottom of bucket:
Hi-Res:
http://www.radio-media.com/fish/LFSscreenDay01.jpg
Day 2:
Hi-Res:
http://www.radio-media.com/fish/LFSscreenDay02.jpg
Day 3:
Hi-Res:
http://www.radio-media.com/fish/LFSscreenDay03.jpg
Day 3, Removed:
(hi-res was blurry)
Day 3, Cleaned:
Hi-Res:
http://www.radio-media.com/fish/LFSscreenDay03cleaned.jpg
Day 4:
http://www.radio-media.com/fish/LFSscreenDay04.jpg
Day 5: Skip
Day 6: Skip
Day 7:
Hi-Res:
http://www.radio-media.com/fish/LFSscreenDay07.jpg