How much water should I use to 1/4 cup?Have you done the test Steven suggested back in post #13 yet? Until we know the results, we cannot offer much more.
How much water should I use to 1/4 cup?
Whoops... I use a recycled one (originally held flour, then was briefly used to transport soil). Hasn't caused any problems in the two years I've been using it (it was used for soil transport last year) so it's okay? I'm doing my tank work today, so I will get the results on this soon.The "container" should be something like a pail you use for fish things. Pails used for fish should be new (meaning, never used for something before, as chemical residue can be deadly) and used only for fish.
Ok, I forgot to update this for a while. The separate tests showed 40ppm, and the main tanks nitrates haven't gone down. Strange, since nitrites read 0ppm and ammonia 0.25ppm.
I'm wanting to know if maybe my test kit is faulty.
Next time I go to my LFS, I'm gonna get them to test it. I would hate to replace the conditioner since it cost quite a bit, but if it isn't the test kit I will have to.Well if you put in nitrate free water into the bucket and the added the conditioner you should have had zero nitrate water. but if you new read 40ppm then I would stop using that conditioner and use another brand without vitamins. Your existing conditioner is either containated or the vitamins are breaking down and releasing nitrate. A lot of nitrate to push the bucket to 40ppm.
That is a possibility. You could try purchasing a different brand test kit. The other possibility is the test kit chemical is reacting to something else in the water other than nitrate giving you a false positive. Since your tap water is reading zero nitrate then the test chemical must be reacting with something in your conditioner.
Either way your conditioner is suspect and should be replaced with something else such as Seachem prime.
Good idea. Will get that started later today and let you know the various results.I would suggest doing this test once more, but without any gravel in the pail of tap water. Just tap water, and conditioner. Then test for nitrate over a couple days.
There is the possibility something in/on the gravel is involved, since this gravel came from the tank.
When trying to find the cause of this or that, it is often necessary to isolate every possible factor. The test with just tap water and conditioner would tell us it was the conditioner if nitrate appears.
Good idea. Will get that started later today and let you know the various results.