triton method decision

Nmaran72

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hi all. after listening to all of your advice i am just about ready to purchase all my equiptment for my build. my latest curve ball is i want to do an lps and sps tank and im not sure if the triton method will work since i cant find anything that states what type of corals work for this method. if anyone can help me this or direct me to a link that would be great. the filtration is the only thing holding me back
 
Triton works with all coral types, but you will dial in the dosage based on consumption. Make sure to buy test kits to measure at least the big three, Alkalinity, Calcium, and Magnesium.
 
Triton works with all coral types, but you will dial in the dosage based on consumption. Make sure to buy test kits to measure at least the big three, Alkalinity, Calcium, and Magnesium.
That’s what I thought. And only because I have seen posts that stated it is best for dominant sps tanks.
 
That’s what I thought. And only because I have seen posts that stated it is best for dominant sps tanks.

It's a sophisticated and expensive method, when fully implemented, that isn't really specific to any type of tank. I think when folks say best for SPS tanks, they likely mean (or perhaps should mean) that the high degree of control that it allows is not necessarily needed with other types of tanks.

If I was starting from scratch, I'd certainly use some aspects of the "system", but I'd choose to not follow some of their recommendations (some of which don't make sense to me), and I'd probably use DIY additives for much of it.
 
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Hello Randy; could your please elaborate on you above statement ?

This is a copy and paste from a recent thread asking folks what they consider to be the best "method". I bolded some items that seem contrary to Triton method recommendations.

In terms of water chemistry maintenance, I'd maintain calcium and alkalinity with limewater (maybe pH limited to pH 8.55 or less to prevent overdose; probably on dosing timer rather than ATO) and a two part (if needed; maybe also pH limited to pH 8.55 or less). I'd like a continuous alk monitor, and if Mindstream comes on line, I'd monitor ammonia 24/7 and in different system location (main tank, exit from refugium, etc.) for interests sake.

There are some ions I would dose essentially independent of measurement because I don't think measurement is particularly useful for them (e.g., iron because it is typically below detection limits; silicate because it depletes so fast).

There are a bunch of ions that I do not consider important at the levels reefers typically have (e.g., lithium, maybe barium, I'd need to think through this list) and I would make no effort to control those either by export or by dosing.

I would likely experiment on the tank over time to re-verify for myself that my longstanding opinions on certain chemicals are not useful if dosed to maintain natural levels, despite the fact that many reefers do. If they showed a positive effect, I'd rethink dosing them. These include iodide and strontium.

There are a whole bunch of biologically active trace elements that I'd likely measure and dose which I did not in the past, but which also tested low (e.g., molybdenum) and I'd likely dose these to roughly NSW levels. I might experiment on these in a variety of ways (e.g., allowing one to go undosed for a long time and then restart and see if anything apparently changed).

I'd probably do automatic water changes, but again, might also experiment on the amount, from none to a couple of percent a day.

As to other "methods", I'd likely do some or most of these that I partly copied from another post:

Ato
Temperature control (temp controller to kick on heaters or cooling system)
Skimmer
Rodi unit with inline tds
Nutrient export (macroalgae, gfo, organic carbon dosing, GAC, maybe experiment with organic resins like Purigen)
Might try LED lights to save electricity, but I'm not yet convinced I'd like the look
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

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