RO Drip...

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
ecajoe;1485182; said:
i use a fine micron filter and multiple carbon blocks.if you have chloramine you will need a dosmatic to break the chloramine bond or a chloramine filter but they are $$$ and isnt worth it.see in mfk articals noe drip system

http://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=74275

Rallys has a simpler chlorine drip system posted as well.http://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=27474&highlight=rallysman+drip

I personally am going dosmatic/prime though.
 
Unless you have something nasty in your water, I wouldn't bother..

If you're concern is consistency, stick with your hard water.. Just like my 7.8 liquid rock up north here, the hard water is very stable. That extra amount of alkalinity allows for a consistent drip system or large frequent water changes with no parameter swings..

I always get oldschool fish experts moving in from other states with crappy water.. just yesterday I met a guy from Southern Cali, and we were talking plant tanks.. He thought all of his plants and discus were going to die from the hard water, but they are thriving he said. You should of seen the look on his face when I told him I had wild caught rays, that get 50-70% water changes a couple times a week.

He was like :eek::eek::eek::jaw::jaw::jaw:
 
these are whole house filters from lowes still need a little fine tuning on the drip but there are no leaks in the plumbing. i ram running one prefilter one carbon.it cost like $65.00 for both filters. hopefully it will work well. good luck

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no however i do wounder if this could change and the city would suddenly introduce chlorimines in the water?
 
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