Cycling New Tank

vinny007

Fish Fanatic
Joined
Sep 25, 2011
Messages
91
Reaction score
0
Location
northamptonshire
Hi all a change of plan has ended in a new(to me)tank that is now all set up and running,This is a 130ltr Juwel 80 Panarama tank and stand running a Tetratec ex600 filter
The filter has cycled media in it from a friend and the water has had Tapsafe added

What i need to know is
1/ how soon will it be safe to start adding fish?

2/ everything at the moment is covered in small air bubbles will this clear soon?
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0020.JPG
    IMG_0020.JPG
    71.2 KB · Views: 41
Im not very sure on how long it will take to safely add fish, but it shouldnt be too long if you already have the mature media but just make sure you dont add them too early, cause it will cause much more problems, trust me ik.
:rolleyes:
 
The bubbles will clear and are of no consequence, they are just gasses that can stay dissolved in the higher pressure of the water piping system but then gas out once the water reaches the lower atmospheric pressure outside the pipes.

Of much more significance is your first question: When is it safe to add fish? No one can answer that except you and the subject of learning how to determine that is often the main topic in our beginner's forum here.

As you may have been told, it is really a positive thing to be able to get mature media (MM) from the filter of a mature tank! Congratulations! But it is important to -verify- that the MM has had a successful "take" in your filter; that it has transferred successfully. Most of the time it does, but there are those few times that it doesn't and you don't want to kill your fish just because of assumptions.

The way you verify things is by "qualifying" the cycling process of the biofilter aspect of your overall filter (the part that involves the beneficial bacteria (A-Bacs and N-Bacs.)) You qualify a biofilter by reaching the last end portion of a fishless cycle (the Fishless Cycling process is described in our Beginners Resource Center at the top of this forum.)) A biofilter is qualified when it can drop a 5ppm concentration of simple household ammonia to zero ppm ammonia and zero ppm nitrite(NO2) within 12 hours of when the ammonia is dosed and repeat this feat for a week without any "blips" of ammonia or nitrite showing up when you test.

When fishless cycling with MM, the process is usually very rapid, sometimes taking only a week (the qualification week) if the amount of MM is large and healthy. The members here are great and will guide you if you don't understand any of this. Most of us use a good liquid reagent based test kit (such as the API Freshwater Master Test Kit or the Salifert tests) to perform the 24 hour (and 12 hour once the process is far along) ammonia and nitrite testing. The members can also help you find the right sort of household ammonia depending on your location.

~~waterdrop~~
 
You can use the Ace Janitorial Strength Ammonia from your local Ace Hardware store (United States). It cost about $2-3.
 

Most reactions

Back
Top