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i read about this stuff and it seems pretty effective. supposed to cut down on algea growth alot! any one use it? is it just an alternative to carbon or phosban?
thanks man! i am gonna give it a trygrouper therapy;564811 wrote: Granular ferric oxide. Does not replace carbon but is used in conjunction with carbon usually.used for phosphate removal in the hobby and for arsenic removal in drinking water.
excellent info, thanks alot!Schwaggs;564907 wrote: Start slow with 1/4 to 1/2 the reccomended amount of GFO. I run about 1 to 1.5 cups in my reactor on my 500 gallon system and replace it once a month. Don't forget to rinse the stuff, it has lots of very fine dust in it. Basically put the GFO in the reactor, start it up and capture the first several quarts of water that cycles through the reactor and discard. You will understand why when you see it!![]()
Schwaggs;564907 wrote: Start slow with 1/4 to 1/2 the reccomended amount of GFO. I run about 1 to 1.5 cups in my reactor on my 500 gallon system and replace it once a month. Don't forget to rinse the stuff, it has lots of very fine dust in it. Basically put the GFO in the reactor, start it up and capture the first several quarts of water that cycles through the reactor and discard. You will understand why when you see it!![]()
gnashty;564824 wrote: be careful with it - use only half suggested amount and step up over a couple weeks
bruce 1;565004 wrote: Why only use 1/2? Thank you Bruce
grouper therapy;565007 wrote: There is anecdotal evidence that if phosphates are reduced too quickly in a system, corals will become shocked and start to RTN . I have never experienced that and I start out with double the amount. But better safe than sorry
bruce 1;565221 wrote: My phosphates went from 40ppm to .09 in 3 days. Looks good so far.
Thanks
grouper therapy;565007 wrote: There is anecdotal evidence that if phosphates are reduced too quickly in a system, corals will become shocked and start to RTN .
grouper therapy;565007 wrote: There is anecdotal evidence that if phosphates are reduced too quickly in a system, corals will become shocked and start to RTN . I have never experienced that and I start out with double the amount. But better safe than sorry