MonsterMinis;5155956; said:THe point is some schmuck is going to take this "data" and start up with the "less is more" yodeling instead of " more is better" approach. You are justifying every slacker who doesn't do regular water changes in their minds atm... As Jose pointed out it's a very slim margin...
don't blame the data for the actions of "some schmuck" who doesn't understand how to do a water change. the information provided by op is only going to help improve water quality. if a "slacker" doesn't know how to interpret the data, that's their problem, nothing wrong with the #'s.
If I where to skip a 25% water change and just do a 25% once that week.. opposed to someone who skips their 50% once a week. What do the numbers show then? Other then we're human and that does happen. Nitrates would build up to a more dangerous level.
don't skip water changes. what's your point?
if you skip 14 days of water changes on the 25% 2x a week schedule you'll end up with 70ppm on day 14 of not doing water changes.
if you skip 14 days of water changes on the 50% 1x a week schedule you'll end up with 60ppm on day 14 of not doing water changes.
60ppm<70ppm
On a purely numbers level your right, On a realistic application to husbandry practices. You're wrong. It's been proven by breeders and exotic fish keepers for years that you can never do to many water changes. Telling people 1x a week of 50% is fine... is Crap on toast.
This is why I sometimes hate science/labs/ect.
if this is what you took away from the information, you are truly confused!
the data doesn't say how many water changes you should make or how much water to change; it shows ONE thing: "1 large water change keeps your concentrations at a lower minimum (therefore lower average) than multiple smaller water changes adding up to the same volume over the same period of time."
btw 9/10 I'de wager the owners who do 2x a week or more water changes often do more then just a "weekly 50%" and often do more depending on the current state of the tank. It's not just the simple water change itself but the general maitenace that goes along with it, the over-all husbandry habits associated with it. which are a variable you won't find in a lab.
what the hell man!? we can't make people change their water!!! op's just showing how it can be done easier and more efficiently. what are you up in arms about?
The info is interesting.. but shoudln't be made in a blanketed statement to hobbyists in general. because it doesn't apply to the hobby 100%.
it should be and is a "blanket statement" in the respect that it's universal and mathematically proven. it applies to any and everyone.
whether you stick to your routine or not is an entirely different matter.


