Is it ok to rinse bioballs like once a month just to keep detritus down and keep the tank healthy?I know the bacteria is tough to kill.didnt know if it will do more harm than good.
Thanks
Thanks
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Yes I have a evo all in oneI’ve read that you should not. Dunno if that’s true but it’s what I’ve read. Ands don’t remember where. Are you talking in a reactor or the kindle you drop in a sump?
Bacteria are tough. I think that you are suppose to rinse the bio balls to remove the build up that can inhibit water flow and oxygen availability.. I would swish them in a container of tank water or new saltwater to dislodge any solids. Don’t over do it though.Is it ok to rinse bioballs like once a month just to keep detritus down and keep the tank healthy?I know the bacteria is tough to kill.didnt know if it will do more harm than good.
Thanks
No I have the marine pureWould swishing them around in old saltwater from water change work or are they too gunky for that?
*never used those plastic bioballs if that's what we're talking about
Those. Ok. You can vacuum the detritus outNo I have the marine pure
I have a fluval evo all in one and I am using them in the first chamberInteresting comparison between two examples
if bioballs are the only surface area in a quarantine, be careful how you rinse
but if these are bioballs in a display reef they are useless and not helping and not making a difference in ammonia control at all, and if you immediately removed them permanently nothing would change about your reefs ammonia control. Freezing, boiling or drying them or bleaching them or removing them wont ever matter
so, to answer your question we have to know if this is a display tank or a qt. There is no bioload in a display reef that exceeds what rocks carry and requires extra surface area. To use these in a display reef is from carry over training from freshwater keeping that tank bacteria just might not be enough
they’re always enough, in a display reef, due to rocks used.
So are you saying there is no need for them?That size system can't carry bioload up front that would exceed what rocks could carry, these are neutral impact in your setup
It's true saltwater rinsing preserves the bacteria but in the context of the nano reef these bacteria are extras and would not crash the system if removed, due to live rock up front.
If the nano only had pvc pipe up front and was being used as qt they would be a critical link in the layout
www.reef2reef.com
Absolutely no need for them in any reef display
the system handles ammonia equally well with and without them
why would this matter becomes the next question, they’re certainly no harm to have extra surface area in a system
because knowing exactly how biofilters work allows us to manage threads like this
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Official Sand Rinse and Tank Transfer thread
You know why I'm impressed? Because that final assembly tank looks empty/ no water/ that's the sign of one heck of a pre rinse! Well done and thank you so much for the pictures and documentation this is really looking sharp Probably wouldn't come out looking as clean as it did without the...www.reef2reef.com
where every job is removal of surface area. Notice the details that apply to your tank above: any reef on the internet can post there, we remove their entire sandbed plus their bioballs if applicable plus any bricks in the sump, leaving only live rocks, and we transfer the same fish bioload using only those rocks into new tanks.
and for 54 pages, no bottle bac added. We strip reef tanks that whole thread using the rule applied to yours: live rocks in the display are enough for all reefs. This information is used to prevent reef tanks from crashing as we plan to move and swap and upgrade them
post a pic of your reef, let’s see how much surface area is in the display

