BRS canisters have one sponge fused to the bottom portion (the piece you unscrew), and a second unattached sponge that goes at the top.
That
is
so
cute.
Will it hold enough for a tank with 82,000 pounds of coral?
So I have decided to give rowaphos a try. I have a single BRS reactor I plan to use. It came with only one sponge. Question is - does this sponge go at the bottom or on the top?
The sponge goes on the top because you don't want the GFO fines going into the tank. If you are running carbon and can put the effluent from the gfo reactor into it all the better. I have mine going into carbon then going into one of my filter socks (overkill but safe).
If reactor space is a concern BRS makes a stronger GFO version that is 2x stronger so you only use 1/2 as much.
Definitely need the sponge. Just don't press the sponge all the way onto the gfo. Leave a gap so it can "ripple"
From what I understand about carbon dosing or biopellets is if your nitrates go down to zero your system won't be able create more bacteria in order to tie up and remove the PO4 (according to the redfield ratio). Some add nitrate in a controllable dose to help this along.On the other hand I have not run GFO for a long time. I just don't see the need for it when you can carbon dose.
You are correct, I have nitrate on a dosing pump and can keep my levels exactly at 2 nitrate, .03 phos.From what I understand about carbon dosing or biopellets is if your nitrates go down to zero your system won't be able create more bacteria in order to tie up and remove the PO4 (according to the redfield ratio). Some add nitrate in a controllable dose to help this along.