• You are viewing the forum as a Guest, please login (you can use your Facebook, Twitter, Google or Microsoft account to login) or register using this link: Log in or Sign Up

New tank EA aquascaper vs 90P

Hi dean I use a cheap pond pump.from Amazon 1500lph think it was like a tenner and it's really good
The S light is loads more.powerfull than the E I have both and you can see the difference much better colour rendition on the S version alto is correct the SA is just an adjustable mount to the A that is set to lenth both would fit the 900
But there are other options in the same price bracket for example @CooKieS loves his vivid 2 apparently it's a lot stronger and better for reds not used it myself but a option to consider maybe
I would use inline for co2 in a tank that size would be a much better way to distribute the bubbles you could always by a small cheap filter to use as a reactor like @Zeus. In Olympus is callings thread also if worried about the inline coming lose nothing a couple of jublie clips wont fix
As for taps I dont think you need them there is a chance they might lower the flow and you would still need to take Lilly of to clean them.
But also if it was me and I had the choice I would go with the Ada 90p maybe works out more expensive but it's ADA and your cabinet builds are good so would probably work out cheaper and it's still an ADA
Hope this helps cheers
J
Thanks jay i will have a look on amazon for cheap pumps.

I will also go inline rather than intank for the 900 as you say be much easier for me, and the aquascaper is just a easier option as i wont have to build cabinet and paint it etc plus my wife likes the concrete grey colour as matches out living room and struggle to fimd time lately so think will just get cabinet and tank in a set.
Thanks for the kind words though as i was debating ada 90p just think aquascaper makes more sence and they look really good.

As for lights i have had great success with twinstar so think going to stick with what i know and get twinstar SA and should be plenty for me to hopefully get aquarium thriving.

Think i will also go EI on next tank as tropica will work out expensive for pre made and hopefully i get good results from powders from APF, i am hoping once all set up i can do 1 water change a week as would fit my worklife, obviously will do a lot more first month.

Thanks dean

Sent from my SM-G970F using Tapatalk
 
Also need help on what pump to buy to pump water from sink to tank and if its easier buying some enheim taps for water changes.

1590907943793.jpeg


Spray bar pointing up the glass for fast return without any disruption if in a rush. Eheim pump to suit e.g. 1000, 2000, 3000 etc is usually a good investment for multiple jobs.

Or simple if you have a mixer tap:

1590908259127.jpeg
 
I do have a mixer tap and have one of those fittings for my tap just a nightmare to try get right temp but may be simpler as already have the bits save a few pennines.

Is your drain hose just inlet with open hose on other end ?

Thanks for the pics mate sometimes hard to visulise.

just a quick question in first week when do water changes do you clean glass etc every single day or literally just drain and refil the water ?

Also do you dose EI

Dean

Sent from my SM-G970F using Tapatalk
 
Is your drain hose just inlet with open hose on other end ?

Yup

1590909795709.jpeg


Drain the tank to the rain barrel or straight onto the kids thirsty little farming project. Double use.

1590909956840.jpeg



just a quick question in first week when do water changes do you clean glass etc every single day or literally just drain and refil the water ?

Personally I leave sand out of the equation for the first couple of weeks so the glass can be cleaned easily without risk. It is a three minute job and only needs doing if it needs doing, visually check. Most days no though.

For the first week or two I park a 220l barrel next to the tank (my wife loves the barrel, you can tell by the steam pouring out of her ears just how excited she is to see it sitting there in place of the sofa 😂).

So much water exchange in the first two weeks that having water ready to go, to the desired parameters means it’s done quickly - which means it will get done and there’s no excuses for being lazy.
 
.

For the first week or two I park a 220l barrel next to the tank (my wife loves the barrel, you can tell by the steam pouring out of her ears just how excited she is to see it sitting there in place of the sofa ).

Haha that mad me chuckle, similar here, I just get asked 'do you really need to leave that barrel there and how many water butt's do you really need in OUR garden'

No wastage of water is what i tell her
 
Also do you dose EI

This deserves a longer answer really...

Tend to try as many products and methods as possible. I think a lot more knowledge can be garnered through experience and observation than hypothetical musings if that’s your goal.

In some tanks Paul Sears and Kevin Conlin’s PMDD+PO4 has worked well. Others, fast stems or huge plant mass I will go EI. Sub 50l tanks I use TNC Complete as tend to do water changes in a less frequent fashion. Also it puts money in a retailers pocket and supports TNC, a British company and I am biased to supporting British business where possible. Even ADA’s expensive water works brilliantly if you subscribe to rich soil, high light, balanced Co2 and ruthless regimented water changes and maintenance. Other tanks without livestock I dose an all in one twice a month and do water changes monthly, growth is slow but really clean.

Another component... 120 TDS controller water using RO like Green Aqua? Simple super hard tap like Aquarium Gardens? How much hardship do you want in your life? Happy to answer methods for both and their pro & cons but don’t want to derail your thread.

At the end of the day your not paying for a raw product from branded fertiliser sellers, your buying their controlled fertiliser regime. If you go salts you are buying raw and it’s your job to work it out, which can be fun and informative.

Tend to think less about adequate fertilisation these days and more about speed, form and compactness of growth. Also, how much maintenance do I want to deal with.

So do I use EI, yes... when applicable. But it isn’t the only tool in the toolbox. Also phytohormones (plant hormones) at startup as an additional topic...
 
This deserves a longer answer really...

Tend to try as many products and methods as possible. I think a lot more knowledge can be garnered through experience and observation than hypothetical musings if that’s your goal.

In some tanks Paul Sears and Kevin Conlin’s PMDD+PO4 has worked well. Others, fast stems or huge plant mass I will go EI. Sub 50l tanks I use TNC Complete as tend to do water changes in a less frequent fashion. Also it puts money in a retailers pocket and supports TNC, a British company and I am biased to supporting British business where possible. Even ADA’s expensive water works brilliantly if you subscribe to rich soil, high light, balanced Co2 and ruthless regimented water changes and maintenance. Other tanks without livestock I dose an all in one twice a month and do water changes monthly, growth is slow but really clean.

Another component... 120 TDS controller water using RO like Green Aqua? Simple super hard tap like Aquarium Gardens? How much hardship do you want in your life? Happy to answer methods for both and their pro & cons but don’t want to derail your thread.

At the end of the day your not paying for a raw product from branded fertiliser sellers, your buying their controlled fertiliser regime. If you go salts you are buying raw and it’s your job to work it out, which can be fun and informative.

Tend to think less about adequate fertilisation these days and more about speed, form and compactness of growth. Also, how much maintenance do I want to deal with.

So do I use EI, yes... when applicable. But it isn’t the only tool in the toolbox. Also phytohormones (plant hormones) at startup as an additional topic...
Thanks for that very informative, so EI is about watching plants and adjusting as necessary, i currently use tropica and have good results but will work out to expensive for a 900 for me.

The advice is great and helps me massively as a lot of things i am concerned about as such a large investment with tank and lights and filter etc.

So i will get some new hose and use direct from mixer tap to fill the tank and make a hose up for draining like yours

Laughed about your better half and the barrel

I am not the most knowledgable on dry salts etc and what defficencys certain lack of ones cause was debating buying a starter kit from APF but see then do a separate iron one aswel.

Should the strater kit be ok ? May also buy auto doser so dont forget etc.

In first week when doing daily water changes do you literally just drain and refil unless noticable algae or diatoms on rocks etc.

Thanks dean

Sent from my SM-G970F using Tapatalk
 
so EI is about watching plants and adjusting as necessary

I am not the most knowledgable on dry salts etc and what defficencys certain lack of ones cause was debating buying a starter kit from APF but see then do a separate iron one aswel.

You don’t really need to be. The whole principle of EI was ‘more than enough’ so you don’t have to think too hard. This mentality has its limitations, yes. Abundance doesn’t equal uptake sometimes.

APF starter kit great place to start, comes with instructions and is simple. And simple is good, allows you to focus on other things like good Co2 management and light as well as watching your plants progress.

Just a suggestion and it’s what I do, take it or leave it.... In addition to the starter kit, a bag of potassium sulphate and magnesium sulphate may be handy at startup. I don’t dose full macros in the first month on EI tanks with aquarium soil, plenty in the substrate to carry it through and some in the tap more often than not. Just micros and add potassium and magnesium sulphate alongside. Easier with all the water changes in the first few weeks too as its daily dosing. So first month is this:

1590921382905.jpeg


Bottle of MgSO4 and K2SO4. Bottle of micros.

Most tap won’t have a lot of magnesium in the water and consistency with potassium day to day helps photosynthesis along. Also if you abstain from full macros first month you won’t have phosphate blocking iron uptake.

If you want to look for deficiencies then chucking some frogbit in at startup helps give you some feedback. It’s not Co2 limited as it is a floating plant, leaving you a process of elimination with other nutrients. Adds additional o2 as well.

1590921896451.jpeg



In first week when doing daily water changes do you literally just drain and refil unless noticable algae or diatoms on rocks etc.

Yes, on high tech setups. Maybe wipe the glass if it needs it. Waft a hand around to move any decaying leaves so they get sucked up when draining. Main thing is sticking to water changes as most plants come grown emersed. As you submerge them all the decaying organics as the plants shed themselves are polluting your water column. No better filter than a water change at startup.

When dosing just micros and some magnesium and potassium for the first month, have found diatoms tend to be less of an issue. Diatoms use light and your inorganic fertiliser to proliferate, so even more reason to leave full macros out of the water column for the first month. As your plants get going and your tank matures they become less of an issue.

After the first month... micros and macros alternating each day as per APF instructions. Watch your frogbit. Enjoy your tank and start thinking about what fish you like.

** Just for the humour aspect I will add you could just use TNC Lite for the first month then switch to TNC Complete for the same setup as outlined above 😂

It’s back to...

At the end of the day your not paying for a raw product from branded fertiliser sellers, your buying their controlled fertiliser regime. If you go salts you are buying raw and it’s your job to work it out, which can be fun and informative.
 
Last edited:
You don’t really need to be. The whole principle of EI was ‘more than enough’ so you don’t have to think too hard. This mentality has its limitations, yes. Abundance doesn’t equal uptake sometimes.

APF starter kit great place to start, comes with instructions and is simple. And simple is good, allows you to focus on other things like good Co2 management and light as well as watching your plants progress.

Just a suggestion and it’s what I do, take it or leave it.... In addition to the starter kit, a bag of potassium sulphate and magnesium sulphate may be handy at startup. I don’t dose full macros in the first month on EI tanks with aquarium soil, plenty in the substrate to carry it through and some in the tap more often than not. Just micros and add potassium and magnesium sulphate alongside. Easier with all the water changes in the first few weeks too as its daily dosing. So first month is this:

View attachment 149486

Bottle of MgSO4 and K2SO4. Bottle of micros.

Most tap won’t have a lot of magnesium in the water and consistency with potassium day to day helps photosynthesis along. Also if you abstain from full macros first month you won’t have phosphate blocking iron uptake.

If you want to look for deficiencies then chucking some frogbit in at startup helps give you some feedback. It’s not Co2 limited as it is a floating plant, leaving you a process of elimination with other nutrients. Adds additional o2 as well.

View attachment 149488




Yes, on high tech setups. Maybe wipe the glass if it needs it. Waft a hand around to move any decaying leaves so they get sucked up when draining. Main thing is sticking to water changes as most plants come grown emersed. As you submerge them all the decaying organics as the plants shed themselves are polluting your water column. No better filter than a water change at startup.

When dosing just micros and some magnesium and potassium for the first month, have found diatoms tend to be less of an issue. Diatoms use light and your inorganic fertiliser to proliferate, so even more reason to leave full macros out of the water column for the first month. As your plants get going and your tank matures they become less of an issue.

After the first month... micros and macros alternating each day as per APF instructions. Watch your frogbit. Enjoy your tank and start thinking about what fish you like.

** Just for the humour aspect I will add you could just use TNC Lite for the first month then switch to TNC Complete for the same setup as outlined above

It’s back to...
Wow that was very informative, i have been writing bits down here and there lately to try and help make some of the information sink in and hopefully help me in future.

I need to learn the names of the dry ferts and what is in the micros and macros and why.

I will certainly try what you recommended and wont dose full macros as seems logical what you are saying and makes sence. Defently going the EI route. When you say dont dose full macros what you recommend just 1/4 macros one day then full micros next etc or miss odd day of macros

Going to email horizon tomorro and get tank and lights ordered up sure i will have many more questions but thanks for taking time to answer mate.

Dean

Sent from my SM-G970F using Tapatalk
 
If your like me @Deano3 you will need to read that about 20times but wow it is so so so good at explaining EI its I
My go to thread all the time
 
If your like me @Deano3 you will need to read that about 20times but wow it is so so so good at explaining EI its I
My go to thread all the time
100 percent agree it is brilliant,i now have a note pad a wright down bits and bobs that are imprtant in layman terms, i can never rember the names for the powders etc but will defently be implementing EI next scape i alsp have a terrible memory so hopefully will help and i can flick through it.

So much to remember in this hobby but you relise when watching geroges live stream or something similar how much you have actually picked up over the years. But always more to know sometimes people go in depth about how plants work etc and i can never understand or take it in but i gues dont need to know everything just a little about most of it haha.

I was working my way through the replies yesterday will do same later when get time.

Dean

Sent from my SM-G970F using Tapatalk
 
You don’t really need to be. The whole principle of EI was ‘more than enough’ so you don’t have to think too hard. This mentality has its limitations, yes. Abundance doesn’t equal uptake sometimes.

APF starter kit great place to start, comes with instructions and is simple. And simple is good, allows you to focus on other things like good Co2 management and light as well as watching your plants progress.

Just a suggestion and it’s what I do, take it or leave it.... In addition to the starter kit, a bag of potassium sulphate and magnesium sulphate may be handy at startup. I don’t dose full macros in the first month on EI tanks with aquarium soil, plenty in the substrate to carry it through and some in the tap more often than not. Just micros and add potassium and magnesium sulphate alongside. Easier with all the water changes in the first few weeks too as its daily dosing. So first month is this:

View attachment 149486

Bottle of MgSO4 and K2SO4. Bottle of micros.

Most tap won’t have a lot of magnesium in the water and consistency with potassium day to day helps photosynthesis along. Also if you abstain from full macros first month you won’t have phosphate blocking iron uptake.

If you want to look for deficiencies then chucking some frogbit in at startup helps give you some feedback. It’s not Co2 limited as it is a floating plant, leaving you a process of elimination with other nutrients. Adds additional o2 as well.

View attachment 149488




Yes, on high tech setups. Maybe wipe the glass if it needs it. Waft a hand around to move any decaying leaves so they get sucked up when draining. Main thing is sticking to water changes as most plants come grown emersed. As you submerge them all the decaying organics as the plants shed themselves are polluting your water column. No better filter than a water change at startup.

When dosing just micros and some magnesium and potassium for the first month, have found diatoms tend to be less of an issue. Diatoms use light and your inorganic fertiliser to proliferate, so even more reason to leave full macros out of the water column for the first month. As your plants get going and your tank matures they become less of an issue.

After the first month... micros and macros alternating each day as per APF instructions. Watch your frogbit. Enjoy your tank and start thinking about what fish you like.

** Just for the humour aspect I will add you could just use TNC Lite for the first month then switch to TNC Complete for the same setup as outlined above

It’s back to...
Ordered the starter kit and that comes with magnesium sulphate and ordered potassium sulphate so should be all set, would you add the potassium sulpate to one of the bottles with the other chemicals ?

Also do we get any discount from APF ?

Thanks dean

Sent from my SM-G970F using Tapatalk
 
would you add the potassium sulpate to one of the bottles with the other chemicals ?

No. That I personally make up separately (potassium sulphate and magnesium sulphate) and dose alongside micros everyday for the first four weeks at startup. Basically leaving out nitrate and phosphate for the first four weeks of startup then going full EI after week four.

This presumes you’ve planted heavily and are doing as follows:

Week 1 - water changes daily
Week 2 - water changes every two days
Week 3 - water changes twice per week
Week 4 - one water change per week

The rationale is you have plenty of nitrate and phosphate in your soil, enough to carry you through the first month. Have found diatoms to be far less of an issue this way and generally a cleaner tank through the first month.

Depending on your water (if it’s hard like here and high in calcium carbonate but lacking magnesium and potassium from the tap) adding in the magnesium and potassium should make your plants more able to uptake nutrients.

Just understand this is what I do @Deano3 , most folks just go straight to full EI from the get go as per APF’s instructions. If it’s simpler for you just follow APF’s instructions, either way will get your tank going :)


Also do we get any discount from APF ?

Not sure on that one. It would be news to me if so.
 
Back
Top