ultmt45slay;4393396; said:
The old tank probably had a diesease in it, if this is the case you may have to re grout the corners and totaly clean it with mild soap (sunlight etc.) that is what i did.
This is unlikely, especially if the tank was dry for a period of time before he got it. Certainly no disease that would cause immediate death. I can't recommend using any kind of soap to clean as there is always the risk of leaving a residue. You can use a 30:1 bleach solution and rinse, rinse, rinse, dechlorinate, rinse, rinse, and rinse again. You can also use a vinegar solution.
FDemon;4393383; said:
after the first batch died, LFS tested the water and said everything is great, but nitrate is slightly above normal.
ultmt45slay;4393400; said:
also about the nitrate, for the fish to live it should be at 0 ppm this is what causes NTS or new tank syndrome, but the nitrate should be gone after regular cycling
Nitrate is only toxic to fish in large quantities. A cycled tank should be at 0 ammonia, 0 nitrite, and some nitrate...5-20ppm. FDemon, can you give us a timeline of everything, like how many days after the fishes' death did you get the water tested?
FDemon;4393984; said:
I may have found the culprit.... the bottle I got is "stress coat+" and apparently the "+" means it contains ammonia reducing agents. I'll bet that's why they're dying... grrr
When chloramine is neutralized, it turns into a small amount of ammonia. There is a small amount of ammonia reducing agents in Stress Coat+ to combat that, but not enough to neutralize ammonia caused by your fish. However...I'm not a fan of API products, and not a fan of Stress Coat. If you try another 10 goldfish, I would get either some Prime or Amquel+ and do daily partial water changes. Both products neutralize ammonia and nitrites for 24 hours.
If you live close enough, seriously, I would try just one or two feeders for 48 hours just to double check that there isn't a contamination problem. I still do suspect ammonia spikes to be the problem, though.