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#1 |
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Team RC Member
![]() Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Highland, Maryland Entomologist
Posts: 4,987
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GFO color change.
Well this is a first for me. I just changed my GFO and carbon and have been doing this about once per month for a while now. My BRS HC GFO changed from the normal reddish color to a blue grey color. There was some build-up of a white material on the holding container inside surface, perhaps bacteria. The only thing I am doing different is dosing sugar, but I have been doing this for 1 1/2 months now. Would bacteria cause this color change?
![]() The GAC looked normal.
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Cliff Babcock Intestests: Digital Microscopy; Marine Pest Control; Marine Plants & Macroalgae Current Tank Info: 180 g. mixed reef system |
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#2 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Florida
Posts: 306
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I could see that happening. I have heard of bacteria thriving in GFO reactors when individuals started carbon dosing. I don't know the mechanism of change color-wise, but I think its safe to say that this is bacteria related.
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#3 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 2,149
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When P binds to GFO it displaces a Hydroxide. What you are seeing is likely just abiotic precipitation from the high local pH around the GFO.
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#4 |
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Premium Member
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Location: West Seneca NY
Posts: 10,697
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This happened to me with the high capacity gfo about a year ago. Randy, surmised it was localized precipitation of clacium carbonate and suggested I move my dosing site further away from gfo reactor inputs. I did; it worked.
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Tom Current Tank Info: 500g system consisting of a 120g reef sps mixed,a 90g lps,a 90g sps dominant,a 30g breeder lps frag tank ,a 40g sps frag tank,a 20g refugium,a29g refugium, an 88gal sump with live rock and rubble. Calcium reactor and kalk doser , mh pc and vho |
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#5 |
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Reef Chemist
![]() Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Arlington, Massachusetts
Posts: 67,277
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I agree, it could be either, or both.
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Randy Holmes-Farley Club 65535 Current Tank Info: 120 mixed reef |
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#6 |
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Team RC Member
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The pipe that draws water for the reactor is not in my sump where the kalk is added by a dosing pump. The same setup for well over a year. I suppose it must be the bacteria causing this, especially since I see a signififant build-up on the walls of the reactor now for the first time.
I would think that if it were calcium carbonate it would cause a whitish color, not the blue-grey color? Never did this while dosing vinegar. I have noticed that the water flow through the reactor almost completely stops now at the one month mark, which it never did before. Even when I open the 3/4" pvc valve all the way.
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Cliff Babcock Intestests: Digital Microscopy; Marine Pest Control; Marine Plants & Macroalgae Current Tank Info: 180 g. mixed reef system |
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#7 |
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Reef Chemist
![]() Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Arlington, Massachusetts
Posts: 67,277
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Put a little in vinegar and see if it bubbles.
![]() FWIW, I have heard the CaCO3 deposits don't look white but can look more like you mention.
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Randy Holmes-Farley Club 65535 Current Tank Info: 120 mixed reef |
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#8 |
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Team RC Member
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Location: Highland, Maryland Entomologist
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Well, I pulled the old GFO out of the trash and added some to vinegar. Fizz, Fizz ohh what a relief it is.
![]() I learned something new today about the color of calcium carbonate. I assumed it would be white since dead coral is white. Thanks for the help.
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Cliff Babcock Intestests: Digital Microscopy; Marine Pest Control; Marine Plants & Macroalgae Current Tank Info: 180 g. mixed reef system |
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#9 |
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Reef Chemist
![]() Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Arlington, Massachusetts
Posts: 67,277
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It may be white or clear, but on a GFO substrate it may look different. Maybe it also has a lot of iron in it. FWIW, iron carbonate is described as "gray, yellow, yellowish brown, greenish-brown, reddish brown and brown. Some specimens show an iridescence probably caused by surface alteration to goethite."
http://www.galleries.com/minerals/ca...e/siderite.htm
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Randy Holmes-Farley Club 65535 Current Tank Info: 120 mixed reef |
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#10 |
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Team RC Member
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I looked at the gfo under my field scope. Can't get the camera to work with this scope.
There are blotches of grey & white deposits on the GFO. Thanks Randy.
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Cliff Babcock Intestests: Digital Microscopy; Marine Pest Control; Marine Plants & Macroalgae Current Tank Info: 180 g. mixed reef system |
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#11 |
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Team RC Member
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I decided to look at some new gfo (first I have looked at it under the scope). I did get my camera to work with the field scope after fudging with it:
New GFO: ![]() Old GFO: ![]() The old GFO has a very smooth glazing over it. It has taken on a completely different appearance.
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Cliff Babcock Intestests: Digital Microscopy; Marine Pest Control; Marine Plants & Macroalgae Current Tank Info: 180 g. mixed reef system Last edited by HighlandReefer; 11/07/2009 at 06:56 PM. |
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#12 |
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Reef Chemist
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Location: Arlington, Massachusetts
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If that is all CaCO3 coating it, it is almost certainly limiting its effectiveness.
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Randy Holmes-Farley Club 65535 Current Tank Info: 120 mixed reef |
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#13 |
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Team RC Member
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I agree Randy.
The confusing thing to me, is I have been running GFO for over a year now with the same set-up (reactor and position in line in the system). The GFO has never looked like this when I changed it out. I have been dosing kalk in the same position in my sump for this period also. What a major change in my old GFO in one month and not doing anything different for months now (just sugar dosing).
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Cliff Babcock Intestests: Digital Microscopy; Marine Pest Control; Marine Plants & Macroalgae Current Tank Info: 180 g. mixed reef system |
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#14 |
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Team RC Member
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I know my phosphate is very low, since I have been fighting Derbesia. The Hach PO-19 kit does not get any reading. Perhaps I will stop running GFO for awhile since dosing sugar to reduce the nitrates.
I still have nitrates at around 25 ppm and no Derbesia growth to talk about, so I am beginning to think that reducing the feeding drastically has controlled it. I had unreadable phosphate even when the Derbesia was out of control. Maybe I am off basis, but I have slowly come to the conclusion that controlling ones feeding is the best way to control many algae problems. ![]() PS: One way for me to see what effects phosphate has on microalgae problems will be to allow my phosphate level to creep back up a bit. This would eliminate phosphate from the issue.
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Cliff Babcock Intestests: Digital Microscopy; Marine Pest Control; Marine Plants & Macroalgae Current Tank Info: 180 g. mixed reef system |
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#15 |
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Premium Member
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Location: West Seneca NY
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I don't know Cliff mine(brs hc gfo)turned a blue grey; bit bluer than batlleship grey. It happened two or three times but never again and only in one of the two reactors I use. If I recall correctly I was dosing some extra baking soda near the pump input inadvertently at the time. I first thought it was from the sulfur dentirator but that was not the case.Great photos.
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Tom Current Tank Info: 500g system consisting of a 120g reef sps mixed,a 90g lps,a 90g sps dominant,a 30g breeder lps frag tank ,a 40g sps frag tank,a 20g refugium,a29g refugium, an 88gal sump with live rock and rubble. Calcium reactor and kalk doser , mh pc and vho |
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