Hi Josh. Its been a long time since I posted here and in the meantime I thought I would create a shallow tank scape and re-create the other tank. Interestingly I am starting to get the same issues as above, but not as pronounced. The new tank is 4.5 weeks old and grown from tissue cultures. The tech is as follows:
1) A canister filter with good flow around the central "mountain" portion. (Fluval 307 full of sachem matrix).
2) Tank is a 60x30x18
3) Ferts is EI from day one as calculated on Rotala butterfly (KNO3,KH2PO4,MgSO4) + Plantex trace mix.
4) Pressurised CO2
5) Zetlight Lancia 2 (RGB - 1900 lumen at full strength and 24 watt). CO2 on at 11:30 and off at 21:30; lights on at 13:30 (40% intensity); 14:30 to 21:30 (70% intensity); 21:30 to 22:30 (again 40% intensity); then off. The light is 33cm from the substrate as mounted on the wooden stand.
I planted rotala's to help with nutrient uptake, and have a lot of Monte Carlo which is quite yellow green but maybe its the light as this light is fully adjustable and I might not have the right settings there.
As before I am really struggling to dial in the CO2 (1 bubble a second now) and the DC goes yellow at 19:30 already. I know I should dial down the bubble rate, but would my plants suffer if the DC is in the yellow? I can see that this may be the case as the water is more acidic, but I just don't have the experience in this regard. I notice the Monte Carlo is developing slight brown edges on new growth and I have some green spot algae on the dragon rock and glass. Given that I had similar problems in the other tank this is surely also related to my skills at getting the CO2 balance right.
Any thoughts? See the photos attached. Thank you again.
I was wondering how this was going!
Recently, I had an issue with my plants and adding more GH booster helped. This might be an idea. Instead of my previously suggested GH, maybe go for 1 more scoop? Ideally, a floating plant would help rule out CO2 and if it was yellow, then we could try to troubleshoot.
The acidic piece is an important one - and I am not sure - but I can look into it. Do you have a relative pH for us? Maybe the same test of your water before water change and after CO2 injection?
In terms of if the plants would suffer with more CO2 (i.e. a yellower DC), I would say no - just from what I have read about people and plant-only tanks - I haven't tried it myself ... though I am setting one up to try it.
I like the rock coming out!!!
Josh