One of the biggest secrets in the aquarium hobby that nobody wants you to know. Kevin Novak Ph.D.

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • Sodium thiosulfate is an inorganic compound used to treat cyanide poisoning. However, it is THE main compound in most chlorine/chloramine removers sold to aquarium hobbyist. Sodium Thiosulfate can exceed 100ppm overdose and will not harm fish. It is sold by Aquatic Eco-Systems, Inc. @ www.aquaticeco.com phone # 877-FISH-STUFF.
    anoxicfiltrati...
    Dechlorinator-Sodium-Thiosulfate
    Can be bought at Aquatic Eco-Systems.
    . SODIUM THIOSULFATE.
    Without question, this is the chemical of choice for insuring the safe and effective neutralization of chlorine and chloramines is sodium thiosulfate. With over thirty-years of research, published in reputable scientific journals, scrutinized, and experimentally duplicated by hundreds of researchers have proven this fact well beyond any doubt. This chemical can be used at a hundred times the required dosage without any ill effects to the pond inhabitants. Very few, if any, beneficial additives can make this claim. Sodium thiosulfate continues to be the only active ingredient in every effective de-chlorinating product available to the pond hobbyist and aquaculturist alike.
    Each molecule of sodium thiosulfate neutralizes one molecule of highly toxic chlorine to produce one molecule of salt (sodium chloride) and two molecules of sulfate. The minuscule amount of salt and sulfate produced actually improves the electrolyte constituent of salt and freshwater systems.
    Along with its highly beneficial effectiveness for chloride neutralization, sodium thiosulfate has other desirable qualities. It also neutralizes cyanide (reference to page 7 to find out more about cyanide), which naturally accumulates in the pond.
    Several years ago, it was discovered that the chlorine added to public water supplies was reacting with various water contaminants and producing harmful cancer-causing compounds. The addition of chlorine is replaced now with the addition of chloramine. Chloramine is another biocidal compound composed of one chlorine molecule bound to one ammonia molecule. Today, in the United States, chloramine has replaced chlorine in many municipal water supply systems. When sodium thiosulfate is added to chloramine the chlorine bond is broken and the chlorine neutralized back into chloride leaving one molecule of ammonia in solution.
    In an attempt to eliminate this new ammonia source, new claims and the addition of new chemicals to the de-chlorinators resumed. Trying to remove the infinitesimal amount of ammonia left behind after the neutralization of chloramine is unnecessary. A much greater amount of ammonia every day is expelled into our pond’s water immediately after we feed our fish. This burst of released ammonia generally goes undetected by most hobbyists. Within minutes, the ammonia is eliminated by the Nitrosomonas in our biological filters. With our fish never being the wiser to this accomplishment.
    The use of chemical additives to eliminate ammonia is redundant. The only effective way to eliminate ammonia is with a healthy biological filter. There are some organic chemicals, which will bind with ammonia resulting in negative ammonia test kit readings. Unfortunately, the chemical produced (a primary amine: Any organic derivative of ammonia formed by the replacement of hydrogen with one or more alkyl groups) is just as toxic to our aquatic animals as the original ammonia was. The Nitrosomonas bacteria cannot oxidize this chemical. Within 24-hours the heterotrophic bacteria oxidize the primary amine; but you will never guess what is produced - Ammonia! Now you are right back where you started from, except you have now lost over 24-hours by preventing the Nitrosomonas access to the ammonia. Just remember you cannot eliminate ammonia with chemicals - you need nitrifying bacteria or Biocenosis Baskets.
    Dechlorinator-Sodium-Thiosulfate
    How To Make Up A Gallon Of Sodium Thiosulfate:
    Make a solution consisting of 4 ounces (1/4 lbs) Sodium Thiosulfate crystals (photo or technical grade and can be bought from: AQUATIC Ecosystems, Inc. 1-877-347-4788) dissolved in 1 gallon of distilled or deionized water. Use 5 ml (1 teaspoon) of the solution for each 10 gallons of makeup water to neutralize up to 3.75-ppm chlorine. One cup can be used for each 500 gallons. (The entire one gallon of solution will treat about 7500 gallons of tap water.) The shelf life of the solution is about six months to a year when stored in a cool location. The crystals will keep for several years if kept dry.
    Anoxic Filtration System ®
    February 02-2005-2013
    New Updated Version
    • 20 Gal Reset : Anoxic ...
    Link to CZcams video on Plenum and Anoxic conditions called: Sandy Caps by: pecktec

Komentáře • 160

  • @kevinpowell7948
    @kevinpowell7948 Před 3 lety +10

    Here in London I use Campden tablets, used for brewing, 100 tablets cost £3. One tablet treats 20 gallons of water. I get some algae on my glass, rarely wipe it off, every 3months or so, some on the plants which I like, for me l think the benefits outweigh the negatives. I find algae fascinating, single celled organisms to giant kelp. I don't filter my water, change 20% every 5months or so. Lots of plants, soil and sand deep substrate, Walstad style aquarium. Works for me, Happy fish keeping Dr. 🍀

    • @mikefrost2404
      @mikefrost2404 Před 2 lety +3

      I don't clean algae either lol. Everyone tells me my tanks look "dirty" lol BUT , algae is only helping filter the tank... I only get it because i have excessive lighting on my tanks lol.

  • @sylvesterskyes9558
    @sylvesterskyes9558 Před rokem +2

    I managed to have a no algae aquarium using 2 inch sand on the bottom, a heap of fast and slow growing plants and water lettuce + duckweed, one small sponge filter and a whoping 55w led lighting. The aquarium is 2 years old and 6 gallon and i keep something like 8 chilli rasboras, tens / hundreds of cherry shrimp and tens of guppy fry which I put and take out depending on their size. With very strong light, floating plants can absorb the nitrate super efficiently. Nitrate was constantly between 10 and 25 ppm in all if my random tests.
    The feeding that i do is very funny and efficient haha. I suspend a bottle cap from a thin wood stick that comes from outside the water and put food inside. The shrimp go there and stirr the food making small quantities fall off slowly and the rasboras and guppy fry snack on the little pieces. It works great on feeding middle water colum feeders and preventing the snails from covering and devouring food pieces. I use pretty small quantities of food but the fish and shrimp get stuffed and the pesky snails stay hungry.

  • @TheMisleadingWoodpecker
    @TheMisleadingWoodpecker Před 3 lety +8

    When using a sponge filter and wanna clean it without making a mess. Lift it with the air tube and putt it in a plastic bag inside the aquarium. Then take it out for cleaning.

  • @Iamadrummer
    @Iamadrummer Před 3 lety +5

    In order to have a pristine tank with no algae you can not have a tank in direct sunlight. You need a good light but only run it 6 hours a day and have a good amount of live plants eating all the nutrients so the agea can not grow without food. Also it is key to have a good biological/physical filter. Do frequent water changes and clean your physical filters with every water change. Another thing do not use lots of fertilizer or there would be enough nutrients for algae. Do this and you should not see algae at all. If you have autocyclis and or flying foxes they will eat what little algae at the microscopicall level there might be(use algae wafers to ensure they get food). Do all this and you will never have any visible algae ever. Your tank gets full sun therefore it will get algae. Autocyclis and flying foxes will eat the alge on glass, rocks, gravel, all tank furnishings, and off the plants without harming them. Also do weekly water changes. This will greatly minimize algae and you may even get rid of it.

  • @davidcrofts1684
    @davidcrofts1684 Před 3 lety +31

    I am just getting back into fish after a very long absence. I have been researching as much as possible to see what has changed in the last 35 years or so. When I found your CZcams page I was amazed by your discussions regarding under gravel filters. Between 1980 and 1987 I was into fish in a big way. At the end I had over twenty tanks, the largest being two at almost 200 gallons each. The majority of the tanks were 35 to 50 gallons. At this time I was breeding Angels, Discus and Kribensis for sale and many others for sport. I think the interest this story may have to you is that all of my tanks were running with under gravel filters (with small short airlifts) and were heavily planted. In all of the years of keeping fish I did not hear of "Water Change" let alone do it. The only time I actually changed any water in my tanks was on the very rare occasion that they went really toxic. I never did find out why this happened, thank goodness it was only two or three times.
    So I am about to start keeping fish once again at the ripe old age of 76 and can assure you that under gravel filters will be the only way I will be going for filtration. Thank you so much for your insight as why I had so much success.

    • @martyking6942
      @martyking6942 Před 3 lety +8

      I agree. I started keeping fish when I was 11 years old and this month I will be 75. Those inexpensive under gravel filters that I purchased back in the first days of my fish keeping did an excellent job keeping tanks clean and excuse me when I say this, the plants grew like weeds.
      You are correct about water changes because back in 1959 nobody ever spoke of changing water in a tank they just said to keep it full to prevent the heater from malfunctioning. Today I change the water one to two times a month and before everybody out there has a heart attack the API test kit I have shows the water parameters are well within safe limits. My fish don't die prematurely of unknown causes, they live a full life and die of old age.
      Quarantine tanks were never mentioned either. I was told to float the bag containing the new fish for 20 minutes and occasionally add water from your tank then dump everything into your tank. I must admit that did cause an infrequent outbreak of ick. Today I still float the fish but I do a plop and drop into a quarantine tank before adding them to a community tank.
      I'm glad you're back into the hobby.

    • @MrSerendipity01
      @MrSerendipity01 Před 3 lety +2

      I would suggest that your tanks went toxic because you weren't doing weekly water changes.

    • @davidcrofts1684
      @davidcrofts1684 Před 3 lety +7

      @@MrSerendipity01 I don't think you have understood what I have been saying in my post.
      Over a period of ten years, I had over twenty tanks, with a capacity of 35 to 200 plus imperial gallons.
      During that time all of my tanks were equipped with underground filters with 2 to 4-inch substrate.
      Over that period I conducted NO water changes other than replacing evaporation but did have two or three tank crashes for no known reason (at that time).
      Are you suggesting that had I done water changes every week on twenty tanks it may have saved the three that crashed?
      Do you think it would have been worth the time, effort, and expense?
      You obviously follow Dr. Novak's posts but I don't think you have understood one thing that he is trying to tell you.
      Keep up with your water changes and good luck to you.

    • @elaineluikart5459
      @elaineluikart5459 Před 3 lety +2

      @@davidcrofts1684 I used under gravel filters in the 1960 and changed 3/4 of the water every 2 years if it needed it or not. Then I went to a dyna flo because I could see it actually doing something and I got a gravel vacuum cleaner and never did water changes except just the water that went out with the gunk. Tearing down the whole tank was stress on the fish and never did it again.

    • @PetiteLicorne
      @PetiteLicorne Před 10 měsíci +1

      My favorite way to keep fish is without any filter, Waldstad way !

  • @crab_aesthetics
    @crab_aesthetics Před 7 měsíci +1

    Algae is always either increasing in quantity or decreasing. If you have enough things that eat it, it's difficult for it to increase. If it is decreasing, eventually it will become negligible.
    I keep 3 tanks, 30 gallon, 55 gallon, and 20 gallon tall. I used to scrape the algae off the glass periodically but that got really old. I ended up adding nerite snails and otocinclus cats and siamese algae eaters, and lots of floating plants and other plants, and dimming the light considerably. It took quite some time, months in the case of the 20 gallon tall, to finally get the algae under control. It is now such that I do not need to scrape the glass, ever (nor do I do water changes, and the 55 gallon does not even have a filter).

  • @mootamoonta261
    @mootamoonta261 Před 3 lety +5

    No alge on my 4ft tank glass. Heavily planted.
    Floating plants. 4 Neralite snails. 4 ottocinlis . Under gravel filters. Pollyfilter on top of bubble up lifts.
    Kind regards UK

  • @Mrsboncouer
    @Mrsboncouer Před 2 lety +2

    Oh yeah...we used to send out same bottles for bacteria testing, prepped with Na Thiosulfate

  • @Moshbearpig
    @Moshbearpig Před 3 lety +8

    I work at a WWTP and lab, sodium thiosulfate is a godsend for me. I buy it in bulk for my tanks, works just like you described it. Cheers Dr. Novak.

  • @craighughes4598
    @craighughes4598 Před 3 lety +3

    This is great! I just purchased a 4 lbs bottle! I did the calculation and my current dechlorinator costs around 30 times more per year than this solution as per the link you provided!! I am fairly sure the LFS is doing exactly what you just demonstrated, pouring it into 2 litre fluorinated jugs, slapping a sticker with their name on it, and marking it up approximately 30 times the cost!! Thank you! God bless!

  • @christiansweden
    @christiansweden Před 3 lety +5

    The “Flying Fox” (Epalzeorhynchos kalopterus) is actually not much of an algae eater. It is a misconception stemming from its superficial similarity to fish in the genus Crossocheilus (and the fact that they are sympatric), of which one or possibly two species are good at eating algae. The best one being Crossocheilus langei, which is the ‘true’ “Siamese Algae Eater.”

  • @scalor
    @scalor Před 3 lety +7

    Seachem Safe is probably the same stuff. Sold as a powder and they provide a tiny scoop (200mg) that is used to dechlorinate 50gallons or 200litres. Had to order it online, the LFS here in Finland only have bottled dechlorinators for sale.

    • @Mr_pai_pai
      @Mr_pai_pai Před 3 lety +3

      Wait the bottle is 250g and the dose for 50 gallons is 200mg check your math lol
      Here the bottle is 10 bucks on Amazon so it's good for the price.

    • @wyzemann
      @wyzemann Před 3 lety +2

      scalor I agree about Seachem Safe. I won’t change from Safe because my tap water contains Chloramines(chlorine & ammonia), and Sodium Thiosulfate converts the chlorine to ammonia...not safe for fish, at all.

  • @elizabethG633
    @elizabethG633 Před 3 lety +2

    I take my sponge filters by the water tube attached to the top, and then I put it in the bucket, remove the bubble stone and then squeeze out my filters. I just did two tanks today with that method and it doesn't let go of the garbage, until I squeeze it out in the water. I have two more tanks to do tomorrow and that is with three sponge filters, they are doing a great job.
    Also, I have a Berkey in case I need dechlorinated water. But I rarely have to use it unless I want to eliminate harmful elements in the tap water and to dilute the regular water if pH is an issue.

  • @superaquatics
    @superaquatics Před rokem +1

    Thank you fie Sharing. This us excellent, useful & practical information that every hobbyist needs to know. 👍👍👍

  • @Mex710
    @Mex710 Před 3 lety +5

    I just got my bottle today!!! Thanks for letting us know!!

  • @PalJoey-on1yi
    @PalJoey-on1yi Před 3 lety +4

    Two points of clarification. 1) - In your dechlor formula, is it 4 oz of sodium thiosulfate by weight or by volume? 2) - Is it 4 oz of chemical PLUS 1 gallon of water or 4 oz of chemical plus water TO MAKE 1 gallon? Thanks.

  • @guzy08
    @guzy08 Před 3 lety +6

    Thank you for the dechlorinate info Dr. Novak! Have come across this method several times on the net but no definite explanation for the dosage. As for the sponge filter, why not tried using pre (external canister) filter for mechanical filtration? I found it really helpful for collecting fish waste and detritus, so the main (bio) filter get cleaned less frequently.

  • @chriscaragiannis6783
    @chriscaragiannis6783 Před 3 lety +4

    Just a simple question. If 5ml of solution treats 10 gallons of water for chlorine do you triple the dose for chloramine? I've used Seachem Safe which is similar (very cheap) but it does have the ammonia binding agents which for some reason don't allow anaerobic bacteria to establish themselves in my tanks. I recently realized that my municipality uses chloramine in our water. This produces quite a bit of ammonia when using a dechlorinator. I don't think using only Sodium Thiosulfate in this situation is advisable as it creates a toxic environment. I conducted a test today. After a 50% water change my ammonia went to .5 ppm. 5 hours later it was reduced to 0.25 ppm. In the absence of an agent that detoxifies ammonia short term this would create a bad situation. Thank you for sharing once again.

  • @amarabidali5316
    @amarabidali5316 Před 3 lety +2

    Get a mesh intake filter, never gets blocked, alternatively you can just get a small net bag and put it around your intake filter, keeps your fry safe and doesnt get blocked!
    Also for declor, just get the usual declor but a big bottle of it, its a bit more expensive but will last forever, got mine years ago and its still pretty full!

  • @PaulC.494
    @PaulC.494 Před 3 lety +1

    Algae used to grow on the glass each week now it does not grow at all, the light was reduced to 40 percent using an led controller and a deep sand substrate was implemented. I use prime, one bottle treats 2000 gallons, yes it is expensive but I use about 10 drops per week so it will last a long time, someone with a pond or many tanks would benefit from this product, thank you for sharing.

  • @GSP-76
    @GSP-76 Před 3 lety +4

    I've been telling people about sodium thiosulfate for some time now...very cheap and effective. It's mostly used to dechlorinate swimming pools but it can absolutely be used in aquariums or ponds.

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +1

      The aquarium stores keep very quiet 🤫 about it though.

    • @GSP-76
      @GSP-76 Před 3 lety +2

      @@anoxicfiltrationplenums of course, they gotta make their money 💰...I literally had this conversation with the owner of a LFS here and he did the same - played dumb like he had no idea what it was.

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +3

      @@GSP-76 isn’t that funny how they played dumb when you find out something or a way to save money.

    • @goyangdumang1961
      @goyangdumang1961 Před 3 lety +1

      @@anoxicfiltrationplenums what about the chloramine?

  • @Twist_av_Lemon
    @Twist_av_Lemon Před 3 lety +2

    Sponges get lifted slightly and placed in a fish bag before removing and cleaning. Less dirty water leaches into the tank than the crud from a filter being turned on again. If you don't run a filter outlet in a bucket first.

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +1

      That is the point I just made, it’s a big hassle, now you have to put a bag around the sponge. It’s not for everyone.

    • @sko1beer
      @sko1beer Před 3 lety +1

      @@anoxicfiltrationplenums its funny i came across this video i keep a 200L shrimp tank and i keep sponge filters in the tank mostly for it to grow food and air the tank not so much for cleaning the tank for that i also use a canister filter.
      its not worth messing with the sponges you could end up knocking the plants

  • @vexatiouswind
    @vexatiouswind Před 3 lety +3

    That was a great tip, definitely cheaper than any bottle declorinator I have seen. I watch a lot of fish related videos and in none of them have I heard about this, I really appreciate the time you take to share with us Dr. Novak.

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +2

      You help me, I help you. That is the way the hobby should work. So I’m trying to help save fish and you not lose money in the long run.

  • @suzannemoran7281
    @suzannemoran7281 Před rokem +1

    Thank you very much Dr Novak . This should save me some money. 😀

  • @goneviral6037
    @goneviral6037 Před rokem +1

    12:00 starts why you are here, your welcome!!!!!

  • @NorthLVLowRoller
    @NorthLVLowRoller Před 2 lety +1

    I get this type of green dust algae on the glass/acrylic only, it was building up in 3-4 days, the floor of my tank is bare bottom and seems to get covered first then the sides. Tank is in my kitchen with way to much light and indirect light from windows next to the tank on both sides. I cleaned it all off and added a small UV light to hob filter, stopped using led lights and blocked a glare the tank gets from a living room window everyday at 1030am and now the algae builds up around 6-7 days. Today I removed the build directly above the tank in my kitchen (I believe this is why the floor of my tank gets covered so fast). We shall see.

  • @FishmanEricRussell
    @FishmanEricRussell Před 3 lety +4

    It was also used in the old days of photography (lol) as a fixative

  • @Workin_hands
    @Workin_hands Před 3 lety +1

    I've been operating with swimming pool chemicals, been using this stuffs for a year without any issues, plus saves me money.

  • @fperez1821
    @fperez1821 Před 3 lety +3

    I just found your channel and subscribed, thank you for all the great information.

  • @christinekaiser9870
    @christinekaiser9870 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks Dr. Novak! I have chloramine in my water I use 3 drops of prime per gal. this will save me a lot of money!

  • @AQUAGUYUK
    @AQUAGUYUK Před 3 lety +3

    I am unsure if algae is bad ,,, its a natural thing in a body of water and can show balance ,,i have very minimal algae Black beard is not a normal algae and normally transmitted into the environment on something what we can do is mimic nature for healthy fish and use snails and other to help with any visible issues but first light use minimal light if no real plants or 7 hours if live plants keep natural light to a minimum .Filtration need s mechanical and bacterial elements not using any plastic as this is antibacterial ,,,i would use a feeding ring and floating plants also check your fertilizers for nitrates and phosphates also the water source for changes try using white pumice stones as a media this will help aerobic and anaerobic Ok i love the content but my dechlorinate has other elements to aid fish slime coat also ammonium is also detected by kits but they can not differentiate between ammonia and ammonium but a tank requires ammonia to function lets remember the "cycle" but great video well worth the watch

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +1

      I am with you on that one. I don’t think Algae is bad, I think cosmetically it looks good and it also adds to the naturalness of the aquarium. To me anyhow when I see a tank that has no algae it looks like it was just set up it doesn’t look as natural to me.

  • @garethbaker3429
    @garethbaker3429 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks Kevin,
    I missed this one when it came out!

  • @user-ii1ei9gw8t
    @user-ii1ei9gw8t Před rokem +1

    very good video!!!
    thank u

  • @2869may
    @2869may Před 2 lety

    Why would you "squeeze" the sponge back in the tank....? I don't do that, I pull them off SLOWLY and remove them in a container....
    easy peasy....

  • @mlorenzana71
    @mlorenzana71 Před 3 lety +1

    I used rustoleum obscure frosted spray on back of my tanks. All by windows and no problem.

  • @ajaychabai8106
    @ajaychabai8106 Před 3 lety +3

    Hi Dr Kevin, I used oil dry clay (special kitty litter) to make a BCB but I don’t have access to any of the iron sources you listed in your previous videos.. I tried using a chelated iron powder but it leached out of the bcb and turned my water into cherry kool-aid.. the only other iron rich supplement I could find was a product called ironite. It’s a pellet type additive for lawns that looks very similar to Amazonia substrate.. will this work as an iron source to get my BCB’s running?
    I love your videos! I’ve learned so much from your channel. Thank you for sharing your knowledge!

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +2

      One way to avoid the iron all together is, you can add the liquid iron that you can buy off the Internet and that would probably be the simplest way to do it. It’s an iron used for planted aquariums.

    • @ajaychabai8106
      @ajaychabai8106 Před 3 lety +1

      I have chelated iron powder.. its Sequestar 6% 3-0-0.. it turns my hydroponic water cherry koolaid color… is this the right stuff?

  • @marcusshhiew5047
    @marcusshhiew5047 Před 3 lety +2

    Very great information for Sodium Thiosulfate, however i always heard Sodium Thiosulfate not recommended to use in planted tank due to sodium will kill plant. Are this true? Dr. Kevin i appreciate if you input your comment. Thanks in advance.

  • @adkgaladkgal1799
    @adkgaladkgal1799 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you so much,I buy a half gallon twice a year this will save a lot thank you Happy Safe Holidays

  • @SNIPEGAMING29
    @SNIPEGAMING29 Před 2 lety +1

    thank you doctor you saved everyone a ton of money my respects sir blessings to you !

  • @alamondefield2823
    @alamondefield2823 Před 3 lety

    TY love the quality of Light & Water in that tank. Looks great.

  • @henryramos1612
    @henryramos1612 Před 2 lety +1

    thank you

  • @nat-xs2fs
    @nat-xs2fs Před rokem +1

    Sorry for the annoying question, so it works with deionized water or distilled water? Are they practically the same. Thank you.

    • @nat-xs2fs
      @nat-xs2fs Před rokem +1

      Also do you filter your drinking water in a specific way?

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před rokem +1

      We use a zero water pitcher that gets refilled and takes TDS down to zero

  • @douggiles7647
    @douggiles7647 Před 8 měsíci

    It is sodium thiosulfate right? Just because you called it sodium thiophosphate once or twice too, and I think that's a totally different chemical, but I could be wrong.

  • @e.ajones9486
    @e.ajones9486 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for being a great source of info in this hobby.What height should a substrate be after installing the under gravel filter. I'm Thinking of starting either a nano reef or a small tanganyikan cichlid tank. Thinking of using aragonite , is this ok? Thanks for being here.

  • @conman20000
    @conman20000 Před rokem +1

    Does it deal with heavy metals?

  • @davidyoung7955
    @davidyoung7955 Před 2 lety +2

    Hi doc thoughts on the vortex diatom filter I love it

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 2 lety +1

      Great filter

    • @davidyoung7955
      @davidyoung7955 Před 2 lety

      It removes algae bloom in the tank in no time removes fungus pristine water basically acts like nature

    • @davidyoung7955
      @davidyoung7955 Před 2 lety +1

      Love your video do I need a sand cap on a plenum I understand your intention is to mimic nature

    • @davidyoung7955
      @davidyoung7955 Před 2 lety +1

      @@anoxicfiltrationplenums had scuds invade my planted tank good or bad?

  • @kashifs786
    @kashifs786 Před 3 lety +2

    simply gr8 ... keep it coming doc ...:)

  • @BlackDraft
    @BlackDraft Před 3 lety +3

    great video thanks for the tips

  • @Kingshukpalchoudhury
    @Kingshukpalchoudhury Před 3 lety +2

    Is it safe for planted tanks?

  • @TRAPSQUAD187
    @TRAPSQUAD187 Před 3 lety +1

    I wonder if you put contact paper on the window if it would slow the growth by a lot

  • @goyangdumang1961
    @goyangdumang1961 Před 3 lety +1

    Does sodium thiosulfate remove chloramine?

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety

      yes, just takes a drop or two more to do it.

    • @goyangdumang1961
      @goyangdumang1961 Před 3 lety +1

      @@anoxicfiltrationplenums are you sure...last time i check sodium thiosulfate only remove chlorine not chloramine

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +1

      @@goyangdumang1961 The difference between chlorine and Chloramine is that Chloramine has an extra molecule of ammonia attached to it once you break the molecule of chlorine the ammonia molecule just goes back into solution.

  • @woodensurfer
    @woodensurfer Před 3 lety

    You do not need to remove nearly all detritus. The purpose of removing enough detritus is to unclog the sponge/foam.
    Put the old semi-clogged sponge into a submerged bag and carry the whole bag out of the tank. Do not be concerned about the small amount the comes out of the sponge.

  • @flee8978
    @flee8978 Před 3 lety +1

    I am in Canada - I am looking at a local supplier, but what is the difference between the Pentahydrate (ACS reagent) vs anhydrous (reagent grade) versions?

  • @woodworkerroyer8497
    @woodworkerroyer8497 Před 3 lety +1

    You mentioned plecos eat slimecoat, and plant leaves. Do you have any recommendations to keep them happy so they DON'T do that? I have 2 BN and a sailfin (4") in my 55g planted (swords, crypts, anubius) angelfish tank, and have noticed the leaves on the sword and anubius looking much thinner and holier than usual...

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety

      That is what the animals do...eat plants and bother fish. Not for planted tanks at all.

  • @KoiRun50
    @KoiRun50 Před 3 lety +1

    Hi Dr. Novak, I'm so glad that you are back and sharing you wealth of knowledge (as usual). Your explanation in regards to different types of algae sparked my interest. I've had bearded algae that caused havoc in my pond a few years back. It's interesting what you said about friendly and not not so friendly hair algae. I would like to know how you can tell the difference. Is there a quick way? Your explanation behind chemistry of dechlor made it very easy for me to understand (finally). Another question of mine is whether or not Biocenosis Baskets can destroy these water cancer causing contaminants, I believe they call them DBPs (dissinfection by-products) that you mentioned, and (sorry 3rd question), do you think contaminants play a major role (if any) in fish-related cancers? Again Thank you!!!

  • @fahleenfang4642
    @fahleenfang4642 Před 2 lety +1

    is it okay to use Sodium Thiosulfate with Purified water?

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 2 lety +1

      If it has chlorine in it otherwise if it doesn’t then you don’t need it.

    • @fahleenfang4642
      @fahleenfang4642 Před 2 lety

      @@anoxicfiltrationplenums I mean, some of the youtubers say that you should mix Sodium Thiosulfate with Distilled or R.O. water to make a water conditioner. However I only have purified available, is it fine?

  • @muhammadbadat7042
    @muhammadbadat7042 Před 3 lety +2

    Hi
    regarding the tank in the video, what size pump are u using to pull water through your plenum ?
    Have you customized it to reduce the water flow ?

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +2

      A small Tetra 10-30 air pump. It is the smallest one I could find at Walmart.

    • @shedendpussys
      @shedendpussys Před 2 lety

      @@anoxicfiltrationplenums is there an alternative and practical way to pull water slowly through a plenum without using an air pump? I'm trying to make my new aquarium as silent as possible and don't want to hear bubbles popping. Thanks.

  • @JAYSONE77
    @JAYSONE77 Před 3 lety +1

    how stable is it in solution, what’s the shelf life?
    I know Seachem SAFE advises not to make a solution and rather add directly to the tank due to lack of preservatives that their other products contain. Idk if this is just a marketing statement though to preserve sales.

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +2

      I made some up some in a gallon of water and have kept it for well over 3 to 4 years.

    • @JAYSONE77
      @JAYSONE77 Před 3 lety +1

      So how can you tell when it goes “bad”?

  • @woltergrant
    @woltergrant Před 3 lety +1

    Dr. Novak, do you dechlorinate your water before adding it to your tank or add the new water then put in drops of dechlor, or add drops of dechlor then add new water?
    Always wanted an educated opinion on this. Does it make a difference either way?

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +1

      Are usually just squirted it in the aquarium or pond before I fill it up or why’ll I am filling it up. Let’s say I’m changing only 3 to 4 gallons of water in my 20 gallon tank I don’t even bother using the declaration at all.

  • @voluntaryismistheanswer

    I wonder why dechlorinator kills daphnea? I am always worried I will forget and replace their tank water with something that was dechlored. And if my Berkey fluoride filter water is safe or desirable, everything is so complicated! Will it kill my rotifers too?!

  • @shanesipple5185
    @shanesipple5185 Před 3 lety

    Thank you Dr.! Your very informative! You have some amazing results!. I just liked and subscribed! Have you seen “green aqua’s” channel?! It’s pretty fancy and informative. I’m glad you were recommended to me!. It’s pretty sad how few high tech aquarium lights are available in the American market.! I have a 29 gallon tank I’m planning to aquascape with co2!. I find that the filter selection is pretty good, but their designs don’t seem like the water directly flows through the media. Is that on purpose? Also, do warm water fish and planted aquariums work together? Most information I find warns against the high temps because of algae.?

  • @atkinsnatureaquariums3552

    I have alot of tanks, all setup a little different. Some tanks i have to clean the glass every week, And others i never touch the glass. I still want to try your method of anoxic filtration for my big cichlid tank. That tank always has high nitrates, im always cleaning the glass and doing weekly water changes to keep the nitrates down.

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for the info. I hope others can learn from it.

    • @atkinsnatureaquariums3552
      @atkinsnatureaquariums3552 Před 3 lety +1

      Back again, finished the video, i had no clue about Sodium Thiosulphate. I think i spelled that correctly. That is definitely a big money saver thank you! Im done wasting money on prime hahaha. Great video, keep up the great work Dr.Novak

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety

      @@atkinsnatureaquariums3552 some secrets nobody ever wants to tell you.

  • @saadalsaad7090
    @saadalsaad7090 Před 3 lety

    i have used it long time before... and it works perfectly

  • @waleedjawad9985
    @waleedjawad9985 Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you for your helpful video
    I’m thinking of using Sodium Thiosulfate Pentahydrate Na2O3S2
    Is it the same as you describe.

  • @PCLye
    @PCLye Před 3 lety

    I used Sodium Thiosulphate for my tanks... relatively low cost. less than USD2.00/kg

  • @rob_was_here
    @rob_was_here Před 2 lety +1

    12:20 is the secret lol

  • @exoedge6322
    @exoedge6322 Před 3 lety +1

    I have a marineland 75 since I set it up about 2 months ago I haven’t had any algae with the marineland light it comes with, its very dim. I have left it on for ~10 hours a day trying to grow algae for the small pleco I have in there and theres none.

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +4

      Along time ago when you used to buy a tank you would get a light with it. That light would be dim but it would make the colors of the fish really stand out. And the the light would stay on for 10 or 12 hours a day very little algae buildup would be on the glass and there would be some on the rocks and plants only. It wasn’t until later when people start using brighter and brighter lights that gave out more lux did Algae problems begin to irrupt into a problem. Then of course the plant craze came along and algae problems seem be more pronounced with the Advancement of high powered LED lights.

    • @mrgrump2534
      @mrgrump2534 Před 3 lety

      @@Baffi_ most people ain’t got time for all that nonsense

  • @MarcassCarcass
    @MarcassCarcass Před 3 lety

    Can it help plants that just went thru an alum dip to kill off snail eggs? Like, a heavy metal detox?

  • @Ttblondey
    @Ttblondey Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks

  • @softaco3088
    @softaco3088 Před 2 lety +1

    Just reduce the blue light

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 2 lety +1

      Not true! I actually show full spectrum lighting on aquariums and still no algae. So the problem isn't reduce the blue or reduce the red it is you have an in balance in your aquarium. So instead of fixing the problem we just put a Band-Aid on it hopefully the problem won't come back.

    • @softaco3088
      @softaco3088 Před 2 lety +1

      @@anoxicfiltrationplenums interesting. I've always fixed it by reducing the blue. Never have algae, nit even green spot. I run a plant 3.0 at 100% other than the blue at 15%

  • @letricblue
    @letricblue Před 3 lety

    So its hard to find/confirm the fórmula to make the mix fir declor water bottle. I have 500g per gallon but not sure if its right? Can you confirm dr novak?

  • @ims2400
    @ims2400 Před 3 lety +1

    can i use this is a reef tank? also do know of a way to get rid of bryopsis?

  • @sobiaq
    @sobiaq Před 2 lety +1

    The big secret starts at 12:05

  • @mpwall123
    @mpwall123 Před 3 lety

    I’m going to see if I can track this down. Seachem Prime is expensive

    • @RoswellJazzFestival
      @RoswellJazzFestival Před 3 lety +1

      Different brand, same chemical. www.amazon.com/Cesco-Solutions-Thiosulfate-Pentahydrate-Aquariums/dp/B0849TLZ8Q/

  • @coltonj5543
    @coltonj5543 Před 3 lety

    You shouldn’t have sun light touching your fish tank.

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +1

      Why?

    • @coltonj5543
      @coltonj5543 Před 3 lety +1

      @@anoxicfiltrationplenums because that’s why you have an algae prob. Trust me. You can find that info anywhere.

    • @TheBSideDJ
      @TheBSideDJ Před 2 lety +1

      @@coltonj5543 not at all, my planted tanks do even better with a little natural sunlight without any algae issues. Algae is not a question of light only... Why do you think they use wide spectrum light above tanks ? ... To mimic natural (sun) light. Yeah yeah OK I can hear you already : full sunlight all day...Other case.

  • @dirtyoldfarmhand3
    @dirtyoldfarmhand3 Před 3 lety

    4 ounces

  • @JESSEPAVON
    @JESSEPAVON Před 2 lety +1

    All the talking you did and didn’t say how much ST to put in a gallon.

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 2 lety +1

      I show a chart how to make it and how much ST to add to a gallon of water. One cup of ST to one distilled gallon of water.

  • @woodensurfer
    @woodensurfer Před 3 lety +1

    Sodium thiosulfate was well-known for dichlorination (when I was a youth) but in recent times few use it. I still have a small bottle of it from 40 years ago but have not used it.
    Sodium thiosulfate was used in black and white photography.

  • @michaelharris1779
    @michaelharris1779 Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks for sharing

  • @kb2825
    @kb2825 Před 3 lety +1

    12:17👍

  • @shahrintasrif8217
    @shahrintasrif8217 Před 3 lety +1

    Try using uv submersible lamp it will reduce algae growth

  • @OxAintAFanxO
    @OxAintAFanxO Před 3 lety

    Dr. Novak,
    Do you know if Hydroton expanded clay pebbles can be used as media for the anoxic filter?
    Thank you

  • @raygv1
    @raygv1 Před 3 lety +1

    I think you’re thinking of the Chinese algae eater

    • @anoxicfiltrationplenums
      @anoxicfiltrationplenums  Před 3 lety +3

      Chinese algae eaters are good when they’re small but as they get bigger they start picking on the fish and start sucking the slime off of the fish and bothering them. What I have is flying foxes they seem to let the fish alone even as They get bigger.

  • @alecthenice8115
    @alecthenice8115 Před 3 lety

    2 weeks until grow back for me

  • @Anirban_BHARAT
    @Anirban_BHARAT Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you 👍👍