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03/04/2008, 03:34 PM | #1 |
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Location: Ottawa
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Salt Creep
Last weekend, My boyfriend was over to my place for a visit. He's also into reef keeping.
He took one look at my tank and sump, and started chipping off the salt creep, back into the tank. I FREAKED ON HIM ! ! ! I told him that he's NOT supposed to do that ! He just looked at me and said, "Well why not?" My ex, who got me into reefing, told me never ever to put the salt creep back into the tank. I have no idea why. I just trusted him, and assumed that he knew what he was talking about, and I never questioned to him as to why. So, what do you do with your salt creep? Do you leave it alone? Do you pick it off and throw it away? Or do you chip it back into your tank?
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Michelle ~Poukie, I'm proud of you for throwing up that cake. ~~Mikey~~ ~You're not drunk if you can lay on the floor without holding on. ~Save the earth, there are no princesses on Mars. |
03/04/2008, 03:37 PM | #2 |
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I keep up on mine so it is just a tiny bit that goes back in the tank, been doing that for almost a year.
Too much could cause a spike in salinity I suppose. Other than that I have no other idea if something negative happens. |
03/04/2008, 03:38 PM | #3 |
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What do you think, it is salt, it will raise your SG if you put it back in.
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03/04/2008, 03:41 PM | #4 |
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i throw mine away, if u put it back into your tank it will raise your waters salinity. dont put it back in the tank IMO
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03/04/2008, 03:44 PM | #5 |
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I don't put it back into the tank for the salinity reason. That's the obvious reason.
I just wasn't sure if there was another, more harmful reason not to put it back in.
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Michelle ~Poukie, I'm proud of you for throwing up that cake. ~~Mikey~~ ~You're not drunk if you can lay on the floor without holding on. ~Save the earth, there are no princesses on Mars. |
03/04/2008, 03:47 PM | #6 |
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you do not want to put the salt back into the tank due to the fact that salt can/will burn and possibly kill most corals if it were to fall onto them undisolved.
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Thank you, Josh Bryant |
03/04/2008, 04:23 PM | #7 |
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Location: Pendleton, NY
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You need to put it back in in order to keep the salinity constant. Salt creep is just salt that has come out of solution or has been left behind when water evaporates. If you just throw it out, then the salinity in the tank will drop. Put it back somewhere where it will dissolve before it touches any coral.
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Kirk Current Tank Info: 20 gal long mixed reef, 29 gal freshwater planted |
03/04/2008, 04:28 PM | #8 |
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Otiso,
I disaree, creep is so slw that adjustments to SG with MU and water changes copensate for it. So if my SG runs 1.026 and today I decide to clean my creep and put it in the tank, then what? |
03/04/2008, 04:49 PM | #9 |
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Location: Pendleton, NY
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Scrape it off weekly instead of waiting for it to built up to large amounts of salt. Either way you go, it's not going to matter much. The small quantity of salt isn't going to make much of a difference in the salinity of the system. BTW, what's MU?
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Kirk Current Tank Info: 20 gal long mixed reef, 29 gal freshwater planted |
03/04/2008, 04:53 PM | #10 |
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What ever you do, be careful where it ends up. I had a big piece of salt creep fall into my tank, right onto an anemone --- no more anemone.
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Click my name and then "visit toddrtrex's homepage" for tank pictures Current Tank Info: 210g reef and 65g reef |
03/04/2008, 05:02 PM | #11 |
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Location: Under the Sea, Pa
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I will sometimes knock small pieces back into my sump but never into my display. Like stated above if any undissolved salt hits the tissue of coral or anemones its detrimental. Not to mention if a fish thinks its food thats even worse.
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Couple SPS/Zoanthid tanks and a couple of FW planted tanks. Current Tank Info: 5 pieces of glass with some silicone and plastic frames holding them together |
03/04/2008, 05:05 PM | #12 |
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Depends on the size of the system.
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