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Unread 10/31/2016, 05:29 PM   #1
madmike10000
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Lowering nitrate

I have a 75 gallon tank that has been up for a year and I can't seem to get my nitrates to go under 20 ppm. I change 8 gallons a week with rodi water and it doesn't do anything. The tank has been bb for 2 weeks now because I wanted more flow for my sps. And to try to bring it down. I don't know what to try. I don't have any algae growing or anything and my p04 always test 0. Maybe start carbon dosing? But idk very much about that.
Salinity 34ppt Alk 9
Temp 80. Calcium 440
Mag 1350. Phosphate 0
Nitrate 20. Ph 8.2
2x mp40s
Chinese leds
20 gallon sump with filter sock changed ever 3 days


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Unread 10/31/2016, 06:13 PM   #2
bertoni
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Water changes typically don't work. Carbon dosing might be reasonable to try. Reducing the feeding might be helpful as well.


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Unread 10/31/2016, 06:48 PM   #3
Tanthaitrung
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Volka, vinegar, NO3:PO4-X or chaeto will help. Try to adjust skimmer export more, vacuum sand bed, exchange filter shock regularly


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Unread 10/31/2016, 07:52 PM   #4
madmike10000
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tanthaitrung View Post
Volka, vinegar, NO3:PO4-X or chaeto will help. Try to adjust skimmer export more, vacuum sand bed, exchange filter shock regularly


No sand in my tank and I change every 3 days. I have no fuge. I bought some vodka and I'm gonna try to vodka dose.


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Unread 11/01/2016, 12:27 PM   #5
Reefable
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Nopox works great along with reduced feeding. I had the same issue and I got it down thru reduced feeding and using nopox. My nitrates were at 40-50ppm a month ago and now its between 2-5ppm.


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Unread 11/01/2016, 01:03 PM   #6
Mad_Reefer
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Deep sand bed and macro algae has always worked for me.


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Unread 11/01/2016, 02:04 PM   #7
sandipan.ece
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I know some dont agree, but I think for tanks smaller than 75 gallons (and yours is right on the mark), water change is an effective nutrient export method. Particularly when your nitrate is too high and you need to bring it down quickly.
Apart from water change, I personally use a good quality skimmer and an Algae scrubber from Santa Monica. Both are very effective in exporting nutrient and thereby reducing nitrates.


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Unread 11/01/2016, 02:40 PM   #8
mannytorres16
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i have a 40 gal, and I remember I had really high nitrates in my aquarium years ago, in the high hundreds! and many large water changes helped me lower them to about 10ppm, but it took like 3 weeks for me to fix that prob(I had no fish when I had this prob). I severely lacked maintenance when this happened, but now I learned my lesson and change 10-15% of my water every 2 weeks. in my opinion and experience water changes DO WORK. so maybe you just need to do a bigger water change, feed less, and do plenty of maintenance.


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Unread 11/01/2016, 05:20 PM   #9
bertoni
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The problem with using water changes to lower the nitrate level is that the level can bounce back up very quickly if there's an underlying problem, like insufficient filtration. If a tank is new or has had some shock, then water changes can help a lot.


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Unread 11/02/2016, 07:55 AM   #10
madmike10000
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bertoni View Post
The problem with using water changes to lower the nitrate level is that the level can bounce back up very quickly if there's an underlying problem, like insufficient filtration. If a tank is new or has had some shock, then water changes can help a lot.


It does bounce back quick when I do large water changes. Idk why thought.


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Unread 11/02/2016, 07:58 AM   #11
madmike10000
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mannytorres16 View Post
i have a 40 gal, and I remember I had really high nitrates in my aquarium years ago, in the high hundreds! and many large water changes helped me lower them to about 10ppm, but it took like 3 weeks for me to fix that prob(I had no fish when I had this prob). I severely lacked maintenance when this happened, but now I learned my lesson and change 10-15% of my water every 2 weeks. in my opinion and experience water changes DO WORK. so maybe you just need to do a bigger water change, feed less, and do plenty of maintenance.


I change about 12% a week. I barely feed as it is. I have a 2 clowns, yellow wrasse, pajama cardinal. I change my socks every 3 days and I skim wet with a bubble Magnus curve 5. My matenence is pretty good. Every time I try to do large water changes it just goes back up to 20


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Unread 11/02/2016, 08:01 AM   #12
NaturalReef
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Also make sure there isn't a detritus trap somewhere in your tank or sump. In the back filtration area of my IM lagoon 50 there are dead spots where detritus collects. I have to use a turkey baster to clear those areas of detritus.


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Unread 11/02/2016, 12:21 PM   #13
spkennyva
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This helped me:

http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/sh....php?t=2526998


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Unread 11/27/2016, 10:09 AM   #14
fixingstill
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All-in-one NP BioPellets? I am still reading about it. It says it could lower the nitrate...


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Unread 11/28/2016, 01:45 AM   #15
waterman78
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My suggestion would be to clean your skimmer and other pieces of equipment. Your skimmer could just be at that point where it needs to be cleaned. Also, try dry skimming to allow the water to be cleaned by the skimmer - - - allow it to do it's job. It sounds like you recently removed the sand from your tank and maybe the tank is cycling again due to your base rock leaching out waste. If you can, add some activated carbon to assist with absorbing the foul waste. Just my two cents.


Larry


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Unread 11/28/2016, 04:06 PM   #16
jml1149
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Not to be silly, but have you tried a different test kit? I was using a Salifert test kit, and my results were significantly higher than expected. So I went out and got an API test kit, and my results were much more reasonable. Now that I had two different test results, I sent off for one of the AquaMedic samples, and the API kit was much closer to the professional results than the Salifert kit. Sometimes, just get bad batches. Probably the case in my experience.

Long story short, if you're that concerned about it, before you do anything drastic, I would verify your results with another, independent test kit. I think the API nitrate test kit runs 8 bucks at the local pet store (not LFS).


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Unread 11/28/2016, 04:08 PM   #17
madmike10000
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jml1149 View Post
Not to be silly, but have you tried a different test kit? I was using a Salifert test kit, and my results were significantly higher than expected. So I went out and got an API test kit, and my results were much more reasonable. Now that I had two different test results, I sent off for one of the AquaMedic samples, and the API kit was much closer to the professional results than the Salifert kit. Sometimes, just get bad batches. Probably the case in my experience.



Long story short, if you're that concerned about it, before you do anything drastic, I would verify your results with another, independent test kit. I think the API nitrate test kit runs 8 bucks at the local pet store (not LFS).


I tested my friends aquarium and it showed zero just like he said it was as well as my brothers tank is at around 5 which was correct so I don't think it's the test kit.


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Unread 11/28/2016, 08:24 PM   #18
organism
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I think vodka dosing might be a good way to go, just start off really slow. There's an article in Reefkeeping magazine that might help, it's what I used.

http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2008-08/nftt/


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Unread 11/28/2016, 08:42 PM   #19
biecacka
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I use a homemade nopox mixture. Vodka and vinegar and it helped lower mine last year.


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Unread 11/29/2016, 11:18 AM   #20
bertoni
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I agree that any kind of detritus trap, like sponges, biological filter media, or many types of sand, can lead to a higher nitrate level. I'd look there. How much food is going into the tank each day, and what types?


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Unread 12/01/2016, 08:50 PM   #21
penkey49harley
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Corey, can I ask what are your ratios of vinegar and vodka? Anything else you mix for your homemade concoction? :-)


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Unread 12/05/2016, 12:17 PM   #22
dartier
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Quote:
Originally Posted by penkey49harley View Post
Corey, can I ask what are your ratios of vinegar and vodka? Anything else you mix for your homemade concoction? :-)
You can find the DIY NOPOX recipe in this thread (http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/sh....php?t=2408985)

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