Household clear ammonia is a very common cleaning product. Where do you live?
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When you fill up your tank with fresh water you will pretty much have 0 Ammonia, 0 Nitrites and 0 Nitrates. Some water supplies have a small trace amount of Nitrates in them. Run each test with your new test kit any you will have an ideas of what the results look like for healthy water.
Next you will need a source of ammonia. If you can't get household clear ammonia (even my local grocery store carries it) you will have to come up with a different source of ammonia. Dump some fish food into the tank and wait 4 weeks. Run the tests again and you should see positive results for ammonia. If you don't see any ammonia wait another week then run the tests again. Continue until you eventually get positive results for ammonia.
Run the tests once a week for the next several weeks. After ammonia is present in the tank you will eventually get positive results for Nitrites.
A few weeks later the Nitrite level will continue to go up slowly then you will start to get positive results for nitrates.
Over the next few week the Nitrite levels will eventually start to go down while the Nitrate levels keep rising. This is when your tank is getting close to being cycled. Some where around this time the water will turn a milky white for several days... this is a bacteria bloom and a good sign.
Once the Nitrite level goes down to zero your tank should be cycled. The food you added initially will continue to break down into ammonia. The first (too late and too tired to look up the name) bacteria is processing the ammonia into Nitrites. The second bacteria is consuming the Nitrites as rapidly as the first bacteria can make it and producing Nitrates from the Nitrites.
It is time to do a big water change, wait two days, test again and it the tests look good it is time to add your first one, two or three fish... but no more.
Continue to test the water weekly. There should be no Ammonia, no Nitrites and low levels of Nitrates. Once the Nitrates start to rise it is time to do a water change. Continue to test for Nitrates. Do water changes when the Nitrates start to rise. Pretty soon you will figure how often you need do water changes to maintain healthy low levels of Nitrates and you will test for Nitrates less frequently until you eventually stop testing all together.
After 3 months it is time to slowly add more fish a couple or three at a time.
The test kit is VERY easy to use. It might be difficult to tell the difference between 3ppm of Nitrates and 4ppm of Nitrates... but there is no need to have such accurate measurements. You need to know if the Nitrates are present, if the Nitrates level is low and it the Nitrate level is high. The test is plenty accurate to tell you this. When Nitrates are high you need to do a water change.