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Old 06-06-2005, 12:24 AM   #1
littletank
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TAP WATER has Ammonia reading of 5!

Hello. For some reason the water from my tap has had an ammonia reading of 5 for the past couple of months. We have an Aquasana water filter attached to our kitchen sink and that has an ammonia level of 2.5, so what am I supposed to use for water changes? I have read that bottled drinking water is not good for aquariums, but I can't think of anything else to use.

Also, is ammonia in our drinking water bad for me and my family? I will appreciate any advice y'all can give me.

Thanks,
littletank
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Old 06-06-2005, 12:28 AM   #2
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Fill up a glass of water tonight before going to bed. Add dechlorinator that removes Chloramines and then test in the morning. You may have Chloramine's in your water which is giving false ammonia readings.
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Old 06-06-2005, 01:04 AM   #3
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getting a ammonia reading means that your municipality has started using chloramides instead of just chlorine to sanitize the water. Chloramides (ammonia+chlorine) dosent leave the water like chlorine does.. When doing your water changes you will need to use a product like seachems prime to break the bond between the chlorine and ammonia.. that seems like a pretty high reading if the 5 is in [acronym:ed4ac0014d="Parts per Million"]ppm[/acronym:ed4ac0014d] you might want to check with the water company to find out if that is temporary. And alot of water companies are using this method.. It should be fine for human consumption. but as I said it sounds like it is high and they might be able to get it down to the 1 or 2ppm range that is normal..
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Old 06-06-2005, 03:03 AM   #4
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Either that, or someone is pooing in your water . . . which is just gross.

Question though: if he had another ten gallon tank that was established (but fishless), could he not let the water sit there for a week and let the bacteria do the trick? Then afterward transfer it into his aquarium? If that worked, then in the end it would be cheaper.

I dunno, just a theory. Someone tell me if I'm an idiot.
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Old 06-06-2005, 03:12 AM   #5
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5ppm is enough to do a fishless cycle..[acronym:238cb08a72="Laughing out loud"]LOL[/acronym:238cb08a72].. so putting the water into a empty tank that has a seeded filter should do the trick but there is nitrate to think about.. time to put some plants in that empty tank..[acronym:238cb08a72="Laughing out loud"]LOL[/acronym:238cb08a72]
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Old 06-06-2005, 08:37 AM   #6
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if your tank is cycled then i wouldnt worry about the chloramines in your tap water (although the 5ppm looks a bit high) for water changes...even though your test kit is giving you a positive reading... if your using a water conditioner like seachem's prime it would be in a non toxic form....so your bacteria will take care of that...the water company here in toronto increases the amount of chloramines in the summer time...but mine is only 0.25-0.50ppm....[acronym:9df49d92e5="Hope this helps (or) Happy to help"]HTH[/acronym:9df49d92e5]....
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Old 06-06-2005, 10:12 AM   #7
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Littletank - See if you can obtain water tests results from the supplier of your water (usually found on the local gov's website). It would be good for you and your family to have this information.
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Old 06-06-2005, 11:33 AM   #8
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I second the use of SeaChem Prime to remove chloramines.
Also, just call the water company. They'll send you a detailed analysis of the city water supply.
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Old 06-06-2005, 11:23 PM   #9
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Thanks everyone for your responses. I wish I had read them before I went to the fish store today. I was on that end of town running other errands so I told them of my dilemma and they gave me something called Amquel+ to remove the ammonia in the water.

Oh, and if anyone is wondering, yes the tank has been cycled and doing well for almost six months. Let me know if Amquel+ is as good as SeaChem. It says it removes Nitrite, nitrate, ammonia, chlorine, and chloramines.

Question though: Wouldn't it be a bad thing to remove all ammonia? The biobugs need it to live. Well, unless this Amquel just removes it initially but doesn't STAY in the water. That must be it, just intial "removal" Ignore my my previous "brain exercise"

Oh, and it makes sense about them adding chloramine in the summer because during the spring my straight from the tap read 2.5ppm but once going through the Aquasana filter it read 0, so that worked out for me, but these past two months I got 5ppm from the tap and 2.5 from the filter. I'm in the Southest of the South Louisiana so we've already got temps in the 90's and we went through a little drought about a week ago, that probably affected the water as well.

Anyhow, thanks again and please let me know if you "approve" of Amquel. I added it this afternoon. This is the first small water change I've done with the tap water in the last couple of months because I've had to use bottled water, which was a huge pain in the neck. I hope I didn't mess up the pH by switching from tap to bottled to tap again??? I'm about to test the water. I'm pretty sure it's okay because all my little fishy friends are frolicking as we speak!

Many thanks,
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Old 06-07-2005, 12:01 AM   #10
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Amquel (and all other [acronym:5386c982d0="Ammonia"]NH3[/acronym:5386c982d0] "removers") actually "bind" the ammonia molecules together, doesn't actually eliminate it. It will still go through your filters and be processed by the bacteria.

I use AquaPure for chloramine/chlorine removal...performs the same functions.
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