Prime Ordeal
Fish Herder
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- Sep 24, 2011
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Seriously, just choose any ammonia level you want between 1-4ppm and redose that amount every time it falls to zero. It'll work no matter what the level.
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how much should i dose too? 2ppm maybe?
no the nitrites off the chart
there is a calculator at tab at the top of this page, calculate your tank's volume by its measurements (taking substrate,decor into concideration)
If your ammonia dropped to 2ppm in 2 hrs there is a chance you arent adding enough to get it to 4ppm
Only add "this" ammount once in 24 hrs, too much ammonia can breed the wrong kind of bacteria. And only test once in 24hrs too.
Before you dose next time, do as big as w/c as you can to lower those Nitrates down, and start dosing the correct dose of Ammonia,
Make sure your temp is 30 deg, and no lights are used, and no plants in there. HTH x
im very confused by your reply.you dont do any water changes while you're cycling. You want nitrates while you're cycling, that's what is going to eat your nitrite! The only reason you would do a water change would be if you'd accidentally added far too much ammonia which would stall the cycle.
how much should i dose too? 2ppm maybe?
no the nitrites off the chart
there is a calculator at tab at the top of this page, calculate your tank's volume by its measurements (taking substrate,decor into concideration)
If your ammonia dropped to 2ppm in 2 hrs there is a chance you arent adding enough to get it to 4ppm
Only add "this" ammount once in 24 hrs, too much ammonia can breed the wrong kind of bacteria. And only test once in 24hrs too.
Before you dose next time, do as big as w/c as you can to lower those Nitrates down, and start dosing the correct dose of Ammonia,
Make sure your temp is 30 deg, and no lights are used, and no plants in there. HTH x
im very confused by your reply.you dont do any water changes while you're cycling. You want nitrates while you're cycling, that's what is going to eat your nitrite! The only reason you would do a water change would be if you'd accidentally added far too much ammonia which would stall the cycle.
Yes, you are confused. Nitrosomonas bacteria convert ammonia into nitrIte and Nitrobacter bacteria convert nitrItes into nitrAtes. NitrAtes are then removed with partial water changes. It would appear that that you have a developing nitrosomonas bacteria colony but the nitrobacter colony is not yet developed. The mystery is how you can have such high nitrAtes. Perhaps you need to test your tap water. Just my $.02, but if I was you, I would do a partial water change and keep adding ammonia daily as necessary but not to exceed 2-4 ppm.
so i guess with these results the cycle is all good??
if so i should just carry on dosing 2ppm till both the ammonia and nitrite are back to zero in under 10/12 hours?
im very confused by your reply.you dont do any water changes while you're cycling. You want nitrates while you're cycling, that's what is going to eat your nitrite! The only reason you would do a water change would be if you'd accidentally added far too much ammonia which would stall the cycle.
Adding too much ammonia doesn't grow the wrong type of bacteria, it just doesn't grow the ammonia eating bacteria since the bacteria is eventually effected by the toxicity. This stalls the cycle since ammonia cannot get broken down into nitrite. Bacteria grows just about everywhere. Lots of different types of bacteria grow in your tank besides Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter its just that they are not of concern to us. So I don't agree with saying "you grow the wrong kind of bacteria" you simply don't grow the kind you want.
well i just did what you said and banged #2 bottle and gave it a good shaking and the results are between 20 & 30 so not sure what was going on yesterday
so at the moment i dont need to do a water change is that right? at what point would i need to?
i will post my results here everyday so you can see the progress.
I have to disagree entirely. If ammonia is being converted to nitrite your tank is cycling fine regardless of the ammonia level you are cycling at. Once you get to a high ammonia level like 5ppm above its common that the entire thing stalls. Even if you leave it there for weeks the ammonia won't drop the slightest. Basically nothing is converting it and your cycle is going no where. Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter are indeed the bacteria that create the "cycle" in an aquarium. This is well known. If you insist that this is wrong I suggest you show some evidence or sources and say what bacteria do function in the nitrogen cycle.Adding too much ammonia doesn't grow the wrong type of bacteria, it just doesn't grow the ammonia eating bacteria since the bacteria is eventually effected by the toxicity. This stalls the cycle since ammonia cannot get broken down into nitrite. Bacteria grows just about everywhere. Lots of different types of bacteria grow in your tank besides Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter its just that they are not of concern to us. So I don't agree with saying "you grow the wrong kind of bacteria" you simply don't grow the kind you want.
All of that is wrong Mikaila.
Adding too much ammonia encourages the establishment of the wrong type of bacteria because the bacteria we want in our tank work at levels of less than 0.01ppm ammonia (i.e. less than our test kits can measure). This is why you will often hear of people having a mini-cycle a week or two after they think the tank has cycled as the 'wrong' bacteria die off and the right bacteria take over.
Also the high ammonia is inhibitory to the nitratation bacteria (i.e. those that convert nitrite to nitrate).
Nitrosomonas and nitrobacter are not the bacteria we have in our cycled aquarium (in any number). They are the bacteria that will grow by allowing excessive ammonia and nitrite levels however (i.e. they are the 'wrong' bacteria).