A nitrate reducer will reduce nitrites ?
No it will not. See my post above for response on what to do.
A nitrate reducer will reduce nitrites ?
How do I make a tonic dose of sodium chloride?It seems like you have a mini cycle. I would get those nitrites down with water changes as advised. Treat it as if you are cycling a fish in tank. Do you have another established tank?
Also just fyi, a tonic dose of sodium chloride protects against nitrite poisoning.
I've only had tanks for 6 months . And I was always just told you didn't have to cycle the tank before putting fish in if you transfer the water, substrate, and filters into the new tank first. I mean I waited about 8 hours of the tank running before putting the fish in. And I'm not saying I know anything bc I don't, I go off of what people with established tanks tell me. None of the fish seem distressed. Could it be from over feeding? Bc I have a nervous habbit of worrying about starving my fish. Or could it be bad tap water? I'm going to test my tap water for nitrites TN. My understanding for a cycle is you need the good bacteria to form then it "eats" the amonia then that waste turns to nitrites, the bacteria munches on that then it turns to nitrates?Just what is your understanding of the nitrogen cycle and the importance of cycling a tank BEFORE adding your fish? If someone told you you've crashed your cycle and you said "I don't know what that means", then what people are telling you on here may well go over your head. There's loads of simple, easy to understand literature on line regarding the nitrogen cycle in an aquarium, and also more in depth detail too when you feel you're ready for it.
Reading between the lines I don't think your tank was ever cycled going off the time line, it was probably mid way through at best. And i'm betting you put fish straight in when you set it up? Having your test kit from the start would have benefitted you better. Firstly you get ammonia, then nitrite (which is where you're at), then nitrate starts to build and the other two nasty ones will go to 0ppm which is what ammonia and nitrite should ALWAYS be in an established tank.
For the time being water changes and seachem prime are going to be your closest friends.
idk how to add the link. But I had a 30gal for 3/4 months and it was running smooth with basically all the same fish that's in this current tank besides 3 Geo's and a baby peacock thats going to its own tank. And I moved about 20gals to the 60gal tank, I put everything from the 30gal filter into the 60. And about 25% of the substrate plus the same plants.Did you have a previously set up tank that you transferred substrate and a cycled filter to? Can you provide more details on that tank or link to previous posts on that tank.