taftech
Member
I know you are supposed to do a partial water change after a tank has initially cycled.
Is the main reason to do this to get rid of nitrates? I have algae on my sand, and I have macro algae in my refugium, and my nitrates are 0.
I currently have live rock/sand some shells, a wisper filter, 5 gallon refugium, protein skimmer in refugium, a powerhead pumping water into the refugium (which overflows into the tank), and an additional powerhead for added circulation. I have 3 damsels.
My plans for the tank are to make it into a reef & fish tank.
It is a 30 gallon tank, here are the parameters:
Ammonia 0
Nitrate 0
Nitrite 0
Ph 8.4
Calcium 420ppm
Phosphate 0
KH 9 dKH (161ppm)
Specific Gravity 1.021
Except for needing maybe a tad more salt, do I need to do a water change?
Thanks
Is the main reason to do this to get rid of nitrates? I have algae on my sand, and I have macro algae in my refugium, and my nitrates are 0.
I currently have live rock/sand some shells, a wisper filter, 5 gallon refugium, protein skimmer in refugium, a powerhead pumping water into the refugium (which overflows into the tank), and an additional powerhead for added circulation. I have 3 damsels.
My plans for the tank are to make it into a reef & fish tank.
It is a 30 gallon tank, here are the parameters:
Ammonia 0
Nitrate 0
Nitrite 0
Ph 8.4
Calcium 420ppm
Phosphate 0
KH 9 dKH (161ppm)
Specific Gravity 1.021
Except for needing maybe a tad more salt, do I need to do a water change?
Thanks