TwoTankAmin
Fish Connoisseur
I swore I was done with summer tanks. But the universe always reminds us we are not really in control of anything. Due to exiting the hobby soon and needing to sell a lot of stock, I find I needed to have 4 x 20L up and running shortly and that they would also be coming with me to a major fish event in Sept. where i have a decent space in the vendor room. I bring real tanks and cycled filters to such events.
I also tend to keep a bottle of Dr. Tim's One and Only Bacteria in my fridge in case. I usually augment it with filter squeezings from some of my established tanks. Usually I need to do this due to the volume of filters, But I am only cycling eight x 4x4x4 Poret foam 20 ppi cubefilters. They are all in a single 20L. I set it up on Sunday late afternoon. A few hours later I dropped in a bag of crushed coral and added ammonium chloride (NH4) from my own mix. I have a big jug full of the NH4 in dry form. So I took and empty bottle of the Dr. Tim's NH4 and calculated ow much of the dry mix I needed to add to the bottle along with my RO/Di water to make a similar mix. I doses 1 ml of my solution, which I had mixed last year, waited about 16 or 20 minutes and tested.
It read way too low so I redosed 1 ml and retested in a while and it was now 2 ppm. So I added two more ml and when I tested again I was between 4 and 5 ppm. Incidentally i use the API kit like most here. So I poured in the bottle of Dr. Tim's. It was rated for up to 65 gal. tanks but it had been in the fridge for a number of months and I tool it out to get to room temperature earlier in the day.
I tested Monday morning and I was almost unchanged for ammonia. I tested agine in the evening and saw minimal change, On Tuesday by days end I was reading about 2 ppm. I just tested a little while ago and I am at .25 ppm. We have a thunder storm ongoing but I hope to do a 50% or more water change and redose 4 ml of ammonia into the tank by day's end.
Considering my NH4 solution was on the weak side from age and that the Dr. Tim's was also on the older side, I am happy with the progress. Were I only cycling a single tank I would be adding a full fish load on day 3. I could have added less bacteria and then followed the directions on Dr. Tim's site for fishless cycling using his bacteria, but then it would have taken more like 7-10 days to get where I am now.
However, I need to ramp up the filters to handle 4 times the volume of water but also in 4 tanks not 1. So the process will go like this. Change water, dose 4 ml, test ammonia, wait 12 hours and test again. The goal is to be able to add between 12 and 16 ml of ammonia per day to the tank to get all the filters to the point I can put two into each of the 4 20Ls and somewhat overstock the tanks immediately.
Just a few notes on the set-up. Normally, if a tank has substrate there are a lot of bacteria colonizing it once the tank is established. However. I am not cyling tanks I am cycling filters and i want 100% of the bacteria int them. Once I set up the tanks they will all get a sand bottom of about an inch. There will be no live plants. So, over time there will be bacteria colonizing the substrate in each of the tanks.
So when I head to the event in Sept. and take the tanks and filters, the substrate will not come. Fortunately, a lot of live plants for sale will come as will plenty of Poly Filter. So I will have no issues in the tanks despite leaving a portion of the needed bacteria behind. One advantage I have is that I do not feed the fish over the 4 day weekend
When I ship fish every bag gets a piece of the Poly Filter mentioned above> If you a curious about Poly Filter, have a read here https://www.poly-bio-marine.com/ I have used this stuff for many years and I need to buy more once again.
I also tend to keep a bottle of Dr. Tim's One and Only Bacteria in my fridge in case. I usually augment it with filter squeezings from some of my established tanks. Usually I need to do this due to the volume of filters, But I am only cycling eight x 4x4x4 Poret foam 20 ppi cubefilters. They are all in a single 20L. I set it up on Sunday late afternoon. A few hours later I dropped in a bag of crushed coral and added ammonium chloride (NH4) from my own mix. I have a big jug full of the NH4 in dry form. So I took and empty bottle of the Dr. Tim's NH4 and calculated ow much of the dry mix I needed to add to the bottle along with my RO/Di water to make a similar mix. I doses 1 ml of my solution, which I had mixed last year, waited about 16 or 20 minutes and tested.
It read way too low so I redosed 1 ml and retested in a while and it was now 2 ppm. So I added two more ml and when I tested again I was between 4 and 5 ppm. Incidentally i use the API kit like most here. So I poured in the bottle of Dr. Tim's. It was rated for up to 65 gal. tanks but it had been in the fridge for a number of months and I tool it out to get to room temperature earlier in the day.
I tested Monday morning and I was almost unchanged for ammonia. I tested agine in the evening and saw minimal change, On Tuesday by days end I was reading about 2 ppm. I just tested a little while ago and I am at .25 ppm. We have a thunder storm ongoing but I hope to do a 50% or more water change and redose 4 ml of ammonia into the tank by day's end.
Considering my NH4 solution was on the weak side from age and that the Dr. Tim's was also on the older side, I am happy with the progress. Were I only cycling a single tank I would be adding a full fish load on day 3. I could have added less bacteria and then followed the directions on Dr. Tim's site for fishless cycling using his bacteria, but then it would have taken more like 7-10 days to get where I am now.
However, I need to ramp up the filters to handle 4 times the volume of water but also in 4 tanks not 1. So the process will go like this. Change water, dose 4 ml, test ammonia, wait 12 hours and test again. The goal is to be able to add between 12 and 16 ml of ammonia per day to the tank to get all the filters to the point I can put two into each of the 4 20Ls and somewhat overstock the tanks immediately.
Just a few notes on the set-up. Normally, if a tank has substrate there are a lot of bacteria colonizing it once the tank is established. However. I am not cyling tanks I am cycling filters and i want 100% of the bacteria int them. Once I set up the tanks they will all get a sand bottom of about an inch. There will be no live plants. So, over time there will be bacteria colonizing the substrate in each of the tanks.
So when I head to the event in Sept. and take the tanks and filters, the substrate will not come. Fortunately, a lot of live plants for sale will come as will plenty of Poly Filter. So I will have no issues in the tanks despite leaving a portion of the needed bacteria behind. One advantage I have is that I do not feed the fish over the 4 day weekend
When I ship fish every bag gets a piece of the Poly Filter mentioned above> If you a curious about Poly Filter, have a read here https://www.poly-bio-marine.com/ I have used this stuff for many years and I need to buy more once again.