jacksonpt
Active Member
OK, first some background so you know why I'm asking...
I have a 12g tank - I'm battling an algae problem (diatoms).
Phosphates are a bit high (1ppm).
I suspect silicates are also high, due to the diatoms.
trates/trites/ammonia/ph/sg/temp are all excellent (can't test for anything else as yet).
I've been using tap water w/ conditioner for water changes to this point.
New water tests perfect with the exception of phosphates (1ppm).
I'm on a well, so that poses some problems for RO/DI units, especially the DI part.
So, I'm trying to accomplish 2 things. 1) I want to kick this diatom problem. 2) I want to know the water I'm using for water changes isn't causing problems rather than helping them (as it is now with the phosphates).
Being on a well rather than city water has presented 2 problems. 1) low water pressure, and 2) high CO2 content. The water pressure is an easy fix, the CO2 not so much.
So here's the bottom-line question: Is RO water a significant improvement over conditioned tap water, and how much better would RO/DI water be?
My plan is to buy an RO system now, then add a DI unit to it when I can get the CO2 problem straightened out. I guess I'm wondering if RO is a waste of money without the DI, considering my tank...
I have a 12g tank - I'm battling an algae problem (diatoms).
Phosphates are a bit high (1ppm).
I suspect silicates are also high, due to the diatoms.
trates/trites/ammonia/ph/sg/temp are all excellent (can't test for anything else as yet).
I've been using tap water w/ conditioner for water changes to this point.
New water tests perfect with the exception of phosphates (1ppm).
I'm on a well, so that poses some problems for RO/DI units, especially the DI part.
So, I'm trying to accomplish 2 things. 1) I want to kick this diatom problem. 2) I want to know the water I'm using for water changes isn't causing problems rather than helping them (as it is now with the phosphates).
Being on a well rather than city water has presented 2 problems. 1) low water pressure, and 2) high CO2 content. The water pressure is an easy fix, the CO2 not so much.
So here's the bottom-line question: Is RO water a significant improvement over conditioned tap water, and how much better would RO/DI water be?
My plan is to buy an RO system now, then add a DI unit to it when I can get the CO2 problem straightened out. I guess I'm wondering if RO is a waste of money without the DI, considering my tank...