Jump to content

Tap water or RO/DI for SPS dominant tanks


Which one you belong to ?  

61 members have voted

  1. 1. What type of tank water for your SPS ?

    • I use tap water for my SPS tank and they are growing well !
      10
    • I use RO/DI water for my SPS tank and they are growing well !
      16
    • I use tap water for my SPS tank and they are ok
      12
    • I use RO/DI water for my SPS tank and they are ok
      22
    • I use tap water for my SPS tank and they are always not doing well...
      0
    • I use RO/DI water for my SPS tank and they are always not doing well...
      1
  2. 2. Do you think RO/DI water is a must for SPS dominant tank ?

    • Yes, it is a must
      23
    • Yes, if you got the money
      23
    • No, tap water is good enough
      7
    • No, too expensive
      3
    • No idea
      5


Recommended Posts

  • 7 months later...
  • 10 months later...
  • SRC Member

majority of the people is using DI alone as a source of pure water... (should have included that in the list of answers) but anyways moving forward if given a choice between RO/DI and Tapwater... of course RO/DI would be a better option... Remember Tapwater quality varies from area to area.... and also how old the flats are...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 years later...
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 4 weeks later...
  • SRC Member

Last time used tap water when I first started. NO3 was over range, more than 100 & PO4 was 3. Alage everywhere. Lucky that time was keeping FOWLR. Have switched to DI after keeping mushroom ( my first corals) & they cannot survived. Since then, a lot have changed & improved (equipment wise, time spent & amount of efforts put in). It is a real long journey in reefing. Have learnt a lot from this forum & fellow reefers. DI is a must.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
  • SRC Member

I buy distilled water from uncle Patrick $6/20L for my salt mix and calcium / KH dosing. I find its good enough for sps. Alternatively, I think DI/RO is a must.

Cheers,

James

Reviving my reef tank :

Crystal glass 53" x 22" x 17" rimless (inclusive of 12"x22"x17" IOS)

Life Reef HVS3-24 with mazzei venturi

ATI Sunpower 8 x 39w T5 (4 x Blue plus, 2 x Aqua blue special, Coral plus)

ZET Light 3 x 3w LEDs moonlight

Arctica 1/3 Hp + 1/4 Hp back up

Vortech mp40w x 3 + Jebao wp25

Eheim 1264 x 3 + water blaster 5000

Vortech back up battery

TLF-150 + Rowaphos

Activated carbon

Kamoer 3 channel + CaCl2 + NaHCo3

150L Refugium with DSB, miracle mud, cheato

2ft T5 x 2 light tubes for refugium

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • SRC Member

I use tapwater

Me too :whistle

dear seniors, kindly share what do u use to treat the tapwater before u use it for water change? I am guessing I won't have much time for my time in future as compared to now so if tapwater can be used I like to explore that. TIA

2 Feet Tank: (Decom Feb 2015)
-Lightings : Pharos LED light 90W with wireless controller
-Chiller : Arctica 1/10HP with H2Ocean Flow Pump 2000

-Wavemaker : Vortech MP10ES
-Skimmer : Bubble Magus NAC 3.5

-Return Pump : Eheim Compact 3000
-Reactor – TLF150 (Mod) with NP Biopellet
-Reactor – TLF150 with Rowaphos


Link to comment
Share on other sites

dear seniors, kindly share what do u use to treat the tapwater before u use it for water change? I am guessing I won't have much time for my time in future as compared to now so if tapwater can be used I like to explore that. TIA

Dear Bro,

On the contrary, since time is a constrain ( not money ) for you, then it's better u spend some money and get a good DI unit that will last you for a longer period of time with a much prestine water source.

What i am sharing here is that DI is not a MUST ( though it's nice to have ) for keeping SPS. Those who has seen my tank frequent enough would know what i mean :)

Treatment of tap water for me is basically passing through canister of carbon blocks ( crytal pro unit ), purpose is to remove as much unwanted chemical residual as much as possible.

While i do have ( and have expected ) algea growth, it's still within my tolerable limit and it actually fits my ecological expectation...my herbivorous fishes gets to graze the rocks without having to introduce external food source. None of the fish has been stave to death from day one.

In any case, introduction of food for your corals and fishes would eventually leads to build up of nutrients as well. So you wil still need to have a good filtration and nutrient export system to support and maintain your water quality in a sustainable way. ( info on these areas is aplenty in the forum here and abroad ).

For those others who are keen to explore this area further, I would be happy to share more whenever we meet in person. But please do some home work and read ups first... :)

DI - Good to have but not a must..or at least in Singapore's tap water context.

Treat others the way you wanna be treated...

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • SRC Member

Dear Bro,

On the contrary, since time is a constrain ( not money ) for you, then it's better u spend some money and get a good DI unit that will last you for a longer period of time with a much prestine water source.

What i am sharing here is that DI is not a MUST ( though it's nice to have ) for keeping SPS. Those who has seen my tank frequent enough would know what i mean :)

Treatment of tap water for me is basically passing through canister of carbon blocks ( crytal pro unit ), purpose is to remove as much unwanted chemical residual as much as possible.

While i do have ( and have expected ) algea growth, it's still within my tolerable limit and it actually fits my ecological expectation...my herbivorous fishes gets to graze the rocks without having to introduce external food source. None of the fish has been stave to death from day one.

In any case, introduction of food for your corals and fishes would eventually leads to build up of nutrients as well. So you wil still need to have a good filtration and nutrient export system to support and maintain your water quality in a sustainable way. ( info on these areas is aplenty in the forum here and abroad ).

For those others who are keen to explore this area further, I would be happy to share more whenever we meet in person. But please do some home work and read ups first... :)

DI - Good to have but not a must..or at least in Singapore's tap water context.

thanks for the good explanation, appreciate it!

2 Feet Tank: (Decom Feb 2015)
-Lightings : Pharos LED light 90W with wireless controller
-Chiller : Arctica 1/10HP with H2Ocean Flow Pump 2000

-Wavemaker : Vortech MP10ES
-Skimmer : Bubble Magus NAC 3.5

-Return Pump : Eheim Compact 3000
-Reactor – TLF150 (Mod) with NP Biopellet
-Reactor – TLF150 with Rowaphos


Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • SRC Member

Dear Bro,

On the contrary, since time is a constrain ( not money ) for you, then it's better u spend some money and get a good DI unit that will last you for a longer period of time with a much prestine water source.

What i am sharing here is that DI is not a MUST ( though it's nice to have ) for keeping SPS. Those who has seen my tank frequent enough would know what i mean :)

Treatment of tap water for me is basically passing through canister of carbon blocks ( crytal pro unit ), purpose is to remove as much unwanted chemical residual as much as possible.

While i do have ( and have expected ) algea growth, it's still within my tolerable limit and it actually fits my ecological expectation...my herbivorous fishes gets to graze the rocks without having to introduce external food source. None of the fish has been stave to death from day one.

In any case, introduction of food for your corals and fishes would eventually leads to build up of nutrients as well. So you wil still need to have a good filtration and nutrient export system to support and maintain your water quality in a sustainable way. ( info on these areas is aplenty in the forum here and abroad ).

For those others who are keen to explore this area further, I would be happy to share more whenever we meet in person. But please do some home work and read ups first... :)

DI - Good to have but not a must..or at least in Singapore's tap water context.

seriously? can pm me how your setup works? quite amused that bedok clinic is using "tapwater" haha

Link to comment
Share on other sites

seriously? can pm me how your setup works? quite amused that bedok clinic is using "tapwater" haha

Hi bro, go with what already works for you. As i mentioned earlier, the fresh water goes through a series of carbon canister and i used that for my ATO as well as salt mix reservoir...nothing more :)

Treat others the way you wanna be treated...

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

thanks for the good explanation, appreciate it!

Not at all bro, am just sharing my personal view points. Imo, this topic may seems like a straight forward one. But when dwell deep, it has a far reaching and rather complex implication.

Keep it simple if possible, enjoy watching the reef and dont be a slave to it :)

Treat others the way you wanna be treated...

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • SRC Member

Hi bro, go with what already works for you. As i mentioned earlier, the fresh water goes through a series of carbon canister and i used that for my ATO as well as salt mix reservoir...nothing more :)

now im using pure water from NTUC. pocket cannot tank burning already. maybe getting RO/DI unit soon haha. weekly 2 carton is killing me

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share



×
×
  • Create New...