waterdrop
Enthusiastic "Re-Beginner"
In the beginning when the ammonia is moving down slowly, there is plenty of time for the other species that processes nitrite(NO2) to slowly dribble through the nitrite and turn it into nitrate which may then more or less disappear from your ability to detect it with a nitrate kit (partly because nitrate kits are not that great at what they do and partly because a new setup and filter has other surfaces and molecules to attract some of the nitrate ions and take them out of circulation with respect to your kit. So at first it is quite common to see ammonia slowly go down and then just seem to disappear from the "system" you think you are measuring.
Once things really get going and you are pumping in a good 3 to 5ppm a day of ammonia the story will be different and will result in the huge spike of excess nitrite for which there are not yet enough Nitrospira to handle the processing.
It's ideal to let the ammonia drop to zero unless it drags out, in which case you might recharge at 1ppm.
~~waterdrop~~
Once things really get going and you are pumping in a good 3 to 5ppm a day of ammonia the story will be different and will result in the huge spike of excess nitrite for which there are not yet enough Nitrospira to handle the processing.
It's ideal to let the ammonia drop to zero unless it drags out, in which case you might recharge at 1ppm.
~~waterdrop~~