RO Question

Discussion in 'Water Chemistry' started by Brandon1023, May 14, 2008.

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  1. Brandon1023

    Brandon1023 Fire Goby

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    Hey guys and dolls!

    So as some of you know I got a 125 Gallon Tank the other day. Now with filling it the obvious first choice is with RO water. However I only have about 47 gallons worth of buckets and jugs and no RO unit of my own (PLEASE PLEASE VOTE FOR MY VIDEO! ;D)

    So my thought here is this (ugh I feel like such a noob!! ...not that there's anything wrong with that). I have a 20 gallon refugium running on the 72 right now. I should be ok just using tap water and hooking up the fuge, yes? That will export my phosphates and nitrates from the tap water.

    Is there something else I should consider? Something else I could try? I just don't want to make THREE trips to the LFS buying and hauling water the entire time...my instinct tells me this plan is fine, but what say you?

    And then of course if/when I get an RO unit (PLLEEEEEEEASE vote for me! :)) I can drain a bunch of water and replace it...
     
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  3. Stingray

    Stingray Blue Ringed Angel

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    I filled my 55 with water from the tap, and added some phos zorb to the filter, phosphates are at a low 0.03 tanks been running 8 weeks now, in the long run who knows but at the moment tank and live stock are doing great, but if the refugium will take the nitrates & phosphate out of the tap water that quick i would go with that , i only filled it with tap water at the time because i was a nooooooooobie lol....
     
    Last edited: May 14, 2008
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  4. missionsix

    missionsix Super Moderator Staff Member

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    You've gotta do what you gotta do. However, living on a well here in Oregon, I didn't have the choice to use tap water. When I initially set-up my tank I bought 2 very large rubbermade containers and hauled the water that way. 40+ gallons each. I did get some water in the car, but, I feel it was worth it. Being that you are going to start a very nice tank, I feel that starting from scratch you've got a great opportunity. You will feel much better about your tank in the long run. I'm not sure if your idea will work, but, would hate to see it cause an issue down the road. The gist: SHORT TERM GAIN (MAY) CAUSE LONG TERM PAIN, SHORT TERM PAIN (MAKING EXTRA TRIPS) WILL CAUSE LONG TERM GAIN.
    Good luck 1023. (probably not the answer you were looking for?)
    MISSION
     
  5. Brandon1023

    Brandon1023 Fire Goby

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    So what's the major benefit of RO anyways? I guess I don't honestly know...
     
    Last edited: Dec 1, 2008
  6. Brandon1023

    Brandon1023 Fire Goby

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    LoL no not the answer I was looking for but you make a strong point. A VERY strong point actually....bollocks!
     
  7. missionsix

    missionsix Super Moderator Staff Member

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    Copied from wikipedia.Reverse osmosis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    [edit] Reef aquariums

    [​IMG] [​IMG]
    Typical RO/DI unit used for an aquarium


    Many reef aquarium keepers use reverse osmosis systems for their artificial mixture of seawater. Ordinary tap water can often contain excessive chlorine, chloramines, copper, nitrogen, phosphates, silicates, or many other chemicals detrimental to the sensitive organisms in a reef environment. Contaminants such as nitrogen compounds and phosphates can lead to excessive, and unwanted, algae growth. An effective combination of both reverse osmosis and deionization (RO/DI) is the most popular among reef aquarium keepers and is preferred above other water purification processes due to the low cost of ownership and minimal running costs. (Where chlorine and chloramines are found in the water carbon filterion is needed before the membrane as the common residential membrane used by reef keepers does not cope with these compounds.)
     
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  9. ReefSparky

    ReefSparky Super Moderator

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    good luck!
     
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  10. Brandon1023

    Brandon1023 Fire Goby

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    Good points made by all. It's clear that I better just go with RO. Karma! And thanks!
     
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  11. Tangster

    Tangster 3reef Sponsor

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    Also the metals in the water copper pipe is what many have as well as the old solder with lead and many older cities on the east coat have 100 +yr old pure lead mains in the street that deliver the water to homes . On many wells with copper I have seen the water to totally dissolve and eat the copper pipe up.
     
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  12. lunatik_69

    lunatik_69 Giant Squid

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    If this tank is the dream tank that you said before, why are you willing to cut corners so early in the game? When I transfered from my 45g to my 90g, I made like 4-6 trips to the LFS(5-5g jugs) to fill it up with NSW. Your setting yourself up for failure if you do it this way. Remember, "go slow". Just my 2 cents. Luna
     
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