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#1
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Nutrafin CO2 Natural Plant System?
Anyone have any observations on this type of CO2 product?
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#2
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Nutrafin CO2 Natural Plant System?
In article , Tim B wrote:
Anyone have any observations on this type of CO2 product? I bought one this week actually. While I'm normally a DIY-type guy, I like to see how someone else does it first. My LFS had it for like $25 or so. Seemed beneficial to me to pick up. The actual yeast chamber is pretty nice. It's pretty heavy-duty, double-ply thermos-like hard plastic. The diffuser is fun to watch ::-). All in all, my next tank will be done via DIY, but if you're not into that, seems like a good setup to me. -- Ross Vandegrift A Pope has a Water Cannon. It is a Water Cannon. He fires Holy-Water from it. It is a Holy-Water Cannon. He Blesses it. It is a Holy Holy-Water Cannon. He Blesses the Hell out of it. It is a Wholly Holy Holy-Water Cannon. He has it pierced. It is a Holey Wholly Holy Holy-Water Cannon. He makes it official. It is a Canon Holey Wholly Holy Holy-Water Cannon. Batman and Robin arrive. He shoots them. |
#3
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Nutrafin CO2 Natural Plant System?
"Tim B" wrote:
Anyone have any observations on this type of CO2 product? See my comments in "Hagen diffuser report" from yesterday, in this group. -- www.ericschreiber.com |
#4
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Nutrafin CO2 Natural Plant System?
I found its instructions in PDF format on the web.
(1) It's only rated for 20 gallons. Does it seem like it would be enough for 30? (2) It has two separate packets of stuff that have to be replaced monthly "Eric Schreiber" wrote in message ... "Tim B" wrote: Anyone have any observations on this type of CO2 product? See my comments in "Hagen diffuser report" from yesterday, in this group. -- www.ericschreiber.com |
#5
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Nutrafin CO2 Natural Plant System?
I have been using it for a while now.
I have one on a 75 UK gal tank. A bit of an experiment I guess. I have noticed better plant growth, and a nice drop in pH as a result. The two sachets are just yeast and baking powder. Much cheaper to use your own. I actually bought another today, and now have two on my tank with 1 diffuser. They each take 100g of sugar and 400ml of tepid water, about 1/4 to 1/2 tsp of yeast and some baking soda. The diffuser is the part that has made it worth the money. Otherwise use a DIY generator too. Phil. "Tim B" wrote in message news I found its instructions in PDF format on the web. (1) It's only rated for 20 gallons. Does it seem like it would be enough for 30? (2) It has two separate packets of stuff that have to be replaced monthly "Eric Schreiber" wrote in message ... "Tim B" wrote: Anyone have any observations on this type of CO2 product? See my comments in "Hagen diffuser report" from yesterday, in this group. -- www.ericschreiber.com |
#6
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Nutrafin CO2 Natural Plant System?
"Tim B" wrote:
I found its instructions in PDF format on the web. (1) It's only rated for 20 gallons. Does it seem like it would be enough for 30? Disclaimer - I'm far from an expert on these things, as I'm running my first ever planted tank (20 gallons). The effectiveness of the system would depend on the amount of CO2 gas you're producing and moving through the diffuser. I'm using just the Nutrafin diffuser with my own DIY yeast-in-a-bottle, not the whole black 'tank' assembly. If I wanted to use it for a larger tank, I'd simply hook up another yeast bottle to the same diffuser. I'm quite sure the diffuser would serve a 30-gallon tank just fine. The limit in the complete Nutrafin system is simply the amount of CO2 it can produce. It looks to me like that's about the same limit that any yeast-based CO2 system would face. (2) It has two separate packets of stuff that have to be replaced monthly This is a key reason I went with the DIY for the actual CO2 generating. Yeast, sugar and water are a lot cheaper and more convenient. -- www.ericschreiber.com |
#7
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Nutrafin CO2 Natural Plant System?
In news
empowered us with this mighty blow against the
Patriarchy: I found its instructions in PDF format on the web. (1) It's only rated for 20 gallons. Does it seem like it would be enough for 30? The reaction chamber didn't produce enough CO2 for my heavily-planted 29 gallon tank. I kept the diffuser (good product) but replaced the reactor with my usual 2 quart juice bottle. YMMV. (2) It has two separate packets of stuff that have to be replaced monthly Yeast and a "stabilizer" which is probably baking soda meant to keep the pH of the mixture up. Both can be bought much more cheaply at your local grocery store. |
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