sooo all in favor for aquasafe?a and all in favor of Prime?
how many drops per gallon is need for Prime?
I'm not home at the moment to check but I believe Prime is two drops per gallon.
-Brad
sooo all in favor for aquasafe?a and all in favor of Prime?
how many drops per gallon is need for Prime?
I treat 4.5 gallons of water with 6 drops of prime using my dropper. Who knows what it is with another dropper. I have a graduated dropper and estimated the conversion for 5 ml to 50 gallons as 1 ml for 10 gallons. The half a ml in the dropper takes 6 drops to run out thus 6 drops per 4.5 gallons. If the dropper were a different size, the number of drops would change. A drop is determined by the size of the bottom of the dropper and the surface tension of the drop so there's no point in counting unless you have a measurement for your dropper and the particular liquid you are using.
The JBL water conditioner, Biotopol Plus, may be good, but I have never used it. Most waterconditioners do the same job, but if you keep discus and similar fish, the Alovera that various companies add to their conditioners is acctualy an irritant to them, and overdosing can lead to problems with such fish. I also don't see the need to make fish go through the aditional stress of an irritant being used to create more slime coat after a waterchange. They can produce the slime coat themselves, without help
Denitrol is useless. It contains DEAD bacteria... The bottle is hermetically sealed and no oxygen can get in. Without air, bacteria die off at a rate of 90% per hour. The sealed bottle is almost completely dead within 24 hours. After a few months in the shipping process, I'd be shocked if you could even find one live bacteria in the bottle. Waste of money, stear clear. If you which to show me how these products could possible work, give me three items of research, that aren't manufacturers websites, and that clearly list their sources, or a peer-reviewed scientific paper, either way
All the best
Rabbut