Phosphates

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I keep a bag of phosgaurd in my tank 24/7, and dose 5ml of nopox. For my tank this seems to keep my phosphate and nitrate at levels low enough that corals like but algae doesn’t. I have a lot of fish(feed 8 cubes a day) and corals of all types and they’ve been doing great, on this regimen since I set this tank up 3 years ago. Also I don’t do water changes, last one was 10 months ago. Here’s a couple recent shots to show how it’s working out for me.
Wow! Beautiful....
 
Gh
He doesn't touch any corals, leaves snails alone, and the hermits since I already had a sargassum and bluejaw trigger became nocturnal feeders, I think because of the triggers, so i only see them when the lights are out. I figured he would munch on my maximal clams but he doesnt.
That is so awesome
 
I have a brs dual reactor - gfo and carbon. My montipora and some other corals have not done well. My phosphates are zero. Should I just turn off the gfo for now? Didn't know it worked that well.
 
What kind of rock are you using? Only reason why I ask is because some rock, for example dry Pukani, is known to leach phosphate. I have a 210 gallon with 150 lbs of it and my phosphate is high but I really don't pay much attention to it. Seems to be just a number like anything else so I use my Kenya tree and Xenia as the early warning more or less.

I do not use GFO nor would. I have used NoPox for a couple months and it did lower nitrates and phosphates. It took a bit of time and I used 1/2 of their recommended dose amount while slowing increasing it every 7 days. Worked well but stopped it after a while. Unless you are being plagued by algae troubles I'd personally ignore it.
 
What kind of rock are you using? Only reason why I ask is because some rock, for example dry Pukani, is known to leach phosphate. I have a 210 gallon with 150 lbs of it and my phosphate is high but I really don't pay much attention to it. Seems to be just a number like anything else so I use my Kenya tree and Xenia as the early warning more or less.

I do not use GFO nor would. I have used NoPox for a couple months and it did lower nitrates and phosphates. It took a bit of time and I used 1/2 of their recommended dose amount while slowing increasing it every 7 days. Worked well but stopped it after a while. Unless you are being plagued by algae troubles I'd personally ignore it.


Why wouldn't you use GFO?
 
Why wouldn't you use GFO?

Risk, cost, and removes too much from the water column. NoPox has a similar risk - plenty of threads of people having issues after using it. Both in moderate incremental use is wise but this is just how I would use. Then again I error on the side of caution. But like I said I've not used GFO - only NoPox and it is my opinion.
 
Risk, cost, and removes too much from the water column. NoPox has a similar risk - plenty of threads of people having issues after using it. Both in moderate incremental use is wise but this is just how I would use. Then again I error on the side of caution. But like I said I've not used GFO - only NoPox and it is my opinion.

Ok, some people are telling me to turn off the gfo for now. I didn't think it would do such a good job of stripping the water of everything.
 
Ok, some people are telling me to turn off the gfo for now. I didn't think it would do such a good job of stripping the water of everything.

I believe Randy Farley wrote an article years ago on GFO so I would trust his words of wisdom more than mine - all things chemistry is his wheelhouse :D Grab a cup of coffee or tea if that is your thing and do a quick search on GFO with his name to find it. Maybe you already read it so no big deal. I think it comes down to one of those glass half full half empty questions. Some say no, others say in moderation when necessary, others say yes. I apologize for suggesting it is totally wrong - didn't mean that. I saw the tanks picture and didn't really see signs of algae so tend to error with caution.

Edit: I am not sure who's tank was in the thread - yours, OP's, or another.
 
If you use a GFO (I use rhowaphos in a reactor) it can’t not work, provided you change it when spent and I run this 24/7 and doing this was the best single control method I did to my system. I also use Nopox but it’s not very good for phosphate control.

The change could be anything from a week to a month depending on the phosphate level at the start. I change mine normally every 3 weeks. This time I left it 4 weeks, due to a holiday, and when I tested instead of being around 0-0.o3 it was 0.18! So it was changed

I rarely test the phosphate these days as I just do a regular rhowaphos change and that keeps it locked down.

I think this is the best approach to keeping phosphates in check. I recently decided to do the exact same thing. Just tired of the battle back and forth. Just want to keep phosphates low so I can feed my tank appropriately.

Really do not think I'll have to worry about getting to 0 phosphates. Only using 1 1/2 cup BRS for little over 240g.
 
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How long does the gfo last for you?


Still in the calculation phase of my continuous GFO. If I can get close to 4 weeks from 1.5 cups I'll be fine with that. I don't want to totally strip phosphates, I just want to keep them below 0.08 (if possible).

At 0.11 this morning down from 0.23 a few days ago.
 
How do we maintain .03 ppm if the testers available on the market are only capable of +- .04 accuracy
 
The new Hanna HI774 ULR Phosphate has the accuracy of +/- 0.02 ppm.
 

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