thats what i was thinking when i saw your tankmojoreef said:Oh man that is horrible Edward!!!!!! I dont think I have ever seen a tank so clogged up with those LR parasites before!! I would take a scraper and clean the beautiful rock my friend!!
J/K
Mike
I and many others agree “wet†skimming from the view of exporting nutrients works effective. Especially in tanks which are follow the tank size recommendations by most of the skimmer manufacturers, which are IMO sometimes a little bit huge. It is recommended with the system to skim “wet†at the beginning to eliminate nutrients effective. Later on, when you tank is really nutrient poor this, IMO is positive but not a must. This all depends to the effectiveness and size of the skimmer. As you know, most of the zeo users keep SPS and maybe this is the answer why they use oversized skimmers. They always like to reach the optimum. The skimmer is the primary equipment for the system.Travis said:I have a question on skimming. It seems that from what I've read, zeo users are typically using high performance venturi skimmers set to produce very dry/dark skimmate.
Hmm, what would happen ? I would be very unhappy, because I like the system so much. For me it really would not be easy to find a good alternative. However, to the tank, the same would happen as one decides to stop the system. Depending to your husbandry & bioload, nutrients will rise over a longer period. Lets guess you do not change anything than stopping the system, corals slow will get darker over the time. If your system runs stabile in a nutrient poor phase while you stop, nutrients will not jump up quick. This can last weeks, depending to your nutrient import and export. As we all know how sensitive our corals are, I would recommend to stop the system by slowly reducing the dosage and the zeolite over a two or three week period. This would be more a general advise to prevent quick environment changes which the corals do not like. After my return the tank looked fine, just a little bit darker tissue and weaker coloration which come back quick.Travis said:One thing that worries me about possibly trying this system is what would happen if a contamination of bacteria or other supplement or some other unforseen disaster happened on the manufacturer's end? Would a lot of systems go downhill really fast? What would happen if T. Pohl shut down shop for some reason.
This is not common in Germany – hope this will not change while our worldwide climate changes continuously.Travis said:What would happen if a natural disaster like an earthquake or tornado took out T. Pohl's business?
I often had a dosing break over a longer period while I was not at home. I do not like other people adding the products to the tank, because they do not know my corals which I prior use as a dosing indicator.Travis said:With this stuff going on, I'm guessing it wouldn't be the best for the corals. Who knows, I just like to think "worst case scenario" on everything. I know G. Alexander stated that he has gone 3 weeks without any dosing so maybe it would be fine.
This depends to the size of your skimmer and the husbandry. I have stocked my tank with IMO a lot of fish and did not get any problem with nutrients, but I run a oversized skimmer and care a lot about my tank.Travis said:How about fish load? Are zeo users running light fish loads to aid in maintaining a nutrient poor environment. Or can you have a moderate fish load and still have success with the system?
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