Personally I don't think you can change too much water as long as you are careful to match salinity and temperature.
I would swap half the media, in a canister. That sponge filter in a HOB shouldn't be changed every time you clean it, but rinsed out in saltwater, and swished around to release the big stuff, and then put it back in to reuse it. Use that sponge until it is really worn out, when you notice it getting worn, maybe put a new sponge in the tank, so the next cleaning time...add the new sponge and toss the old. I wouldn't leave anything that's slimy with scum, but do wipe it down with saltwater, not take the whole thing out and wash it in freshwater (that kills the good bacteria).Thanks Flower! You are spot on, I do clean everything, probably too much! I have an HOB filter that has one slide in fibre filter. So, when I clean, I should just swap that out and not wipe down the insides of the filter? It also has a section the the return flows over that collects/grows scum....leave that as well, until it becomes too clogged for water flow?
Would there be a benifit to partially filling the HOB with activated charcoal?
Bio balls in a HOB??? You really don't need them. You have live rock, sand and many other surface areas with good bacteria. You are only going to have as much good bacteria as you have waste, no matter what, or how much surface area you have...so why make something else to have to clean up after....Great advice! That's all I have found here, great help! Thanks! My "standard replacement" filters are two sided inserts with carbon in the middle. I was using them until they started to get holes in them. I would rinse them in fresh water .....I have switched to poly fill sheets. This leaves me with a little more room in the HOB. Thinking about adding a layer of media like small bio balls and a layer of carbon. Thoughts?
I had tons of macros, and my seahorses died one by one, it took a few years. I COULDN'T do proper water changes, I also dosed Cal and Alk, magnesium always was where it was supposed to be...I did small changes, so not completely none as you have. I don't recommend it. The tank looked bad, just dull and ugly...even the little water changes would spark it up. I'm glad it works for you, but it isn't a good bit of advice...especially for those just starting out. I think well established tanks (1 -5 yrs up and running) can be abused a bit, and fudge on things ... new tanks, not so much.sorry I can't help you. I balanced out my old 55g with macro algae and dosed diy two part system for calcium, mag, and alk.
But I did no water changes in 9 years.
my .02
if either don't take anything said on these forums as an insult or just ignore them anyway.I had tons of macros, and my seahorses died one by one, it took a few years. I COULDN'T do proper water changes, I also dosed Cal and Alk, magnesium always was where it was supposed to be...I did small changes, so not completely none as you have. I don't recommend it. The tank looked bad, just dull and ugly...even the little water changes would spark it up. I'm glad it works for you, but it isn't a good bit of advice...especially for those just starting out. I think well established tanks (1 -5 yrs up and running) can be abused a bit, and fudge on things ... new tanks, not so much.
You know I'm a fan of yours, and I LOVE macroalgae! So please don't take what I said as an insult.
I see your point. Ideally, a well set up system is a self contained ecosystem...if either don't take anything said on these forums as an insult or just ignore them anyway.
And I'm a fan of yours as well.
my point is for newbies to look at things other than water changes to help setup a more balanced and stable system as opposed to the water change fixes everything mentality.
still just my .02
In my opinion our small tanks are about as much of a closed system as the typical house.I see your point. Ideally, a well set up system is a self contained ecosystem...
There was a time...about 30 some years ago. The goal was to set up an aquarium, so that it took care of itself. A system that didn't need the tank broke down for cleaning, food or any involvement from humans. I never reached such a goal, nor ever heard of anyone who did, but that was the ultimate goal.In my opinion our small tanks are about as much of a closed system as the typical house.
I didn't get into keeping saltwater until I was 40, until then I was just listening to people who had them. Most didn't continue, and said it was too expensive. I never heard of power heads creating a current to mimic the waves in all that time, or live rock for surface area, although I knew everything is covered with good bacteria, no matter what is in the tank...it's the little sea bugs I never heard of or a CUC. Maybe I just wasn't paying attention, when you look in a SW tank it all looks so calm.35 years ago I was using live rock, macro algae to remove nutrients, VHO lighting, a home made skimmer. Did not have a deep sand bed. My substrate back then was basically reef rubble resembling crumbled up live rock.
The guy you describe sounds like someone I would listen to and love to learn from. It's frustrating to see a failed hobbyist like Beaslbob giving advice to the unaware and uninformed. I know for a fact that he did do water changes every time his reef tank crashed. And yet he continues to insist that he has never done a water change. His corals look miserable, he spun through so many fish I doubt even he could tell you how many have died at his hands.