Fishy Business

Search results

  1. CharlesJohns58

    My First ever icp

    Cuprisorb will remove many metals not just copper, so expect lower values across the board for things like Zn and Co. It may work on your Tin as well. https://www.faunamarin.de/en/knowledge-base/copper/
  2. CharlesJohns58

    My First ever icp

    That copper level is fine, that is 0.008 ppm, nothing to worry about. What additives, if any, do you use? Tin is high, which is odd. I would run another FM ICP to verify these numbers. Never use just one test as a basis to make changes.
  3. CharlesJohns58

    Lanthanum dosing, check my math…

    This is our current LC dosing rate on the big reef. This gives us a level of 0.5-0.7 ppm PO4. We add ours into a sand filter inlet to remove the precipitate. We are adding 275 mL diluted into 30 gallons of DI water of which we currently are dosing approx. 3 gallons/24 hrs. So basically 27 mL...
  4. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    You know it doesn't really matter, you are still talking about the same elements here, N and P, its just the units are different, FM uses a massic ratio, I am using a molar ratio. It's somewhat similar to NO3-N vs NO3. The first tells you the amount of just N, the second is basically the N plus...
  5. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    Yes that is correct. As Claude has said none of this is scientific so we are both basing our recommendation on our experience with our systems, and in his case, his experiences with 1000s of ICP testing on systems. In my case, I am also looking at what has been published in the scientific...
  6. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    The P that they are measuring is all the phosphorous in the system via ICP. It does not distinguish whether these are from organic or inorganic. The Total Phosphate number is just simply converting the P number to PO4. So ideally they should label that total phosphorous (TP) not just P. The...
  7. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    So do corals ... better pull them! ;)
  8. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    Or the ICP test is wrong. ;-)
  9. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    A coarse filter pad will not do it. You need something much finer. Maybe I am missing something, but is there a particular reason why folks are wanting to use LC instead of GFO on these smaller hobbyist systems?
  10. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    There is some confusion in their instructions which could lead to some problems if you don't read everything on their site on how to use it. At first they say you can use it to quickly lower phosphate, which is the last thing you want to do in a reef tank, but later on down the page if you open...
  11. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    We buy 5 gallon jugs from Blue-Line we get the lanthanum (III) chloride 28% TREO solution of 99% purity, not sure if they sell to the public though. https://www.bluelinecorp.com/products/category/lanthanum-iii-chloride-solution
  12. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    @L/B Block The reaction of La with PO4 is pretty quick but it does need some contact time as explained in the article I provided the link to. La is not something that would pool somewhere and I doubt that LaPO4 precipitate would dissolve again at normal tank pH levels. I am not a chemist so...
  13. CharlesJohns58

    Got a Lemon Peel Angel for my reef

    Yes you used to be able to still get Caulerpa palifera, we had some in 2012(?) on the shallows of our reef tank.
  14. CharlesJohns58

    Got a Lemon Peel Angel for my reef

    Nope since since January 1, 2024: https://www.coastkeeper.org/caulerpa-ban-jan-1/ Starting today, January 1, 2024, Californians are prohibited from selling, possessing, importing, transporting, transferring, releasing alive in the state, or giving away without consideration all saltwater algae...
  15. CharlesJohns58

    High phosphates no problem

    That would be a molar N/P ratio of 27.6. The NO3/PO4 ratio falls well below the NO3/PO4 ratio of 100-150 recommended by Fauna Marin. Now I can't speak how these levels are affecting coral skeleton density or zooxanthellae density ... that is a whole other realm of discussion. :p
  16. CharlesJohns58

    very low nitrates and phospahtes

    What test kits are you using? A reading of "zero" is not actually zero, it just means that the level is lower than your test kit's ability to measure it. The attached paper takes an interesting viewpoint of the relationship between corals, zooxanthellae and nitrogen. Worth a read.
  17. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    Yes a wealth of info can be found in these journals stretching all the way back to 1958! They also have a cumulative searchable index of every issue published plus some shark supplements. http://drumandcroaker.org/
  18. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    The ability to remove the precipitate (either LaPO4 or La2(CO3)3) is entirely dependent on contact time and the size of particulate your skimmer can remove. If your contact time is too short and the resulting particulate too small for your filter to remove, it will get back into the tank. I...
  19. CharlesJohns58

    Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

    In my experience, and granted this is on a 212,000 gallon system, you need to add it slowly, in small amounts. We add ours into a sand filter inlet to remove the precipitate. We are adding 275 mL diluted into 30 gallons of DI water of which we currently are dosing approx. 3 gallons/24 hrs. So...
Back
Top