(off-topic) Gee, several posts to address. Wish I could ever figure out whether that button labeled "multiquote" was of any use but have never found it referenced in the Help for IPBoard and its never been helpful when I've experimented with it. Anybody know how the darn thing works?
(on-topic!) pjandnoo: Yes, in fishless cycling you just keep right on plugging away with the adding of ammonia despite all our ravings about "phases" and "spikes" and the like
. We can be very distracting to beginners though we don't mean to be.
The basic rule is that ammonia level tells you when to add ammonia. If ammonia has dropped to true zero ppm any time in the previous 24 hours then you should add a large enough squirt of ammonia to bring it back up to 4-5 (normally) ppm at your "add-time." Even if you are testing for ammonia twice a day at the 12 and 24 hour marks, you should still only ever add ammonia on your established 24-hour mark, even it ammonia measured zero ppm at the 12 hour mark. The reason is to reduce overall additions of nitrogen into the cycling.
OneOnion: I was not suggesting that you switch filters. I was simply trying to take advantage of the "learning moment" to keep your education about good filtration moving forward so that when the time comes that you might be getting a new tank and could afford a better filter, you'd have more information to help you know what constitutes better filter design.
Sid: There's not usually a good way to "make up" for a bad filter design. Stuffing it more tightly carries the risk of burning out the motor or simply slowing the flow rate so much that its less effective at cleaning the tank. The "slow" that I was referring to was not the overall filter flow rate but the internal rate within the media, which are different specifications. Now, I'm not saying that a little strategic adding of some extra fine filter floss might not work out to improve things a bit (careful experimentation should always be a part of being a good hobbyist, right?
) But I'm not sure it would help a lot. Also want to say, like I said to onion, that I don't mean to be calling this design "bad" necessarily. Luckily the powerful magic of a biofilter is pretty flexible, as many of mother nature's systems are, so a lot of good can happen even in a less than ideal device.
~~waterdrop~~