💦 Dive into a cleaner aquarium experience!
DrTim’s Aquatics AquaCleanse is an 8 oz. tap water detoxifier designed specifically for freshwater aquariums. It effectively eliminates harmful chemicals like chlorine and ammonia, ensuring a safe environment for fish and corals. This eco-friendly solution is perfect for both new tank setups and regular water changes, making it a must-have for any aquarium enthusiast.
B**L
Worked for the me, I was just starting
It worked for me but took 15 days to cycle, from what I've read a cycle without using Dr.Tims can take 30 days or more. Maybe it would of been faster if I didn't use Fluval shrimp and plant substrate because it lowers the PH and I had to constantly be checking the PH and doing small water changes to get the PH to 7 or more. I didn't know anything coming in but I did research and this will work but there are rules. 1.Ph cannot go below 7 if it does the cycle will stall so you can get it kickstarted again by doing partial water changes. 2. Do not let your ammonia and Nitrite go over 5ppm or that can kill some of the good bacteria and stall the cycle, you can correct this by doing partial water change. 3. Please buy a api master kit or something like it because they are more accurate then strips and please follow directions of each test bottle for accurate results, if it says shake the bottle for 1 minute then do it, shake for 30 seconds do it. 2. Shake the bottle well of Dr.Tims Bacteria, this is a must. 3. Do not gravel vac or disturb the substrate. Do not clean the filters, do not change the filters. This is for freshwater I didn't do a saltwater tank but if you have Filter socks or UV lighting they must be removed for the 1st 48 hrs when you add dr.tims bacteria. Filter socks is not the average filter so don't remove your filter thinking it's a filter sock, look it up to see the difference. 4.Use a water conditioner that does not remove ammonia.5.if you are doing a substrate free tank this will take your tank longer to cycle because the only thing your benifical bacteria will have to grow on is your filter and maybe your tank walls and decor.6. You need a source of ammonia to feed the bacteria which Dr.Tim makes as well, do not add ammonia if you have fish, these are instructions for a fishless cycle, if you have fish the fish will produce ammonia for you when they use the restroom and the uneaten food will be producing ammonia for you.7.use a heater and crank it to 82 degrees again without fish in the tank. This will help bacteria grow faster, kind of like how hot tubs are breeding grounds for bacteria. 8. Don't add ammonia until you get a reading of 2 ppm just add 2 ppm ammonia by following directions of the Dr.Tims bottle which the newer bottles say 4 drops per gallon will equal 2ppm ammonia so if you do the 4 drops per gallon and you get your test and it says 1ppm on the test then that is okay don't add more ammonia to get it to 2ppm on the test, the reason it's not showing 2ppm is because the good bacteria is already working and doing it's job. This only applies to the 1st application. The equation is already done for you if you buy Dr.Tims Ammonia when doing a fishless Cycle 4 drops per gallon is 2ppm ammonia no matter if the test says 1ppm on first dose. Dr.Tim has a recipe for when you should check the ammonia and has a youtube explaining the do's and do nots, so that really helped me, check it out. 9. If you are not using Dr.Tims Ammonia then it will be very hard to figure out what 2ppm ammonia is and if you buy ammonia from the store you have to make sure the ingredient is only ammonia and possible water but if it says any other ingredient then no don't but it because it will contaminate your tank with soaps, perfumes, and other stuff. 10. If either or both ammonia and Nitrite are above 1ppm do not add ammonia. Look up Dr.Tims fishless cycle recipe and you will be shown when to check ammonia and other directions that way you are not wasting time and test liquid. Good luck, Dr. Tim can also be asked questions on YouTube and on his site, but it takes a while for an answer on YouTube try his email maybe it will be faster that way. Good luck
A**.
Finally something that works!
I’ve been trying to cycle my tank with other brands’ bacteria in a bottle for over a month and getting no results. I added Dr. Tim’s One and Only Live Nitrifying Bacteria to my tank on Friday night and by Monday morning I had nitrites. This stuff did in a weekend what the other products couldn’t do in a month. If I ever need to cycle another tank I wouldn’t hesitate to buy it again.There was some cloudiness initially when I added the whole bottle, but it didn’t seem to hurt anything and cleared up quickly. Now my tank is clear again and finally on its way to being cycled!If you’ve been struggling to get your tank to cycle and are starting to think bacteria in a bottle are probably a scam, I can’t recommend Dr. Tim’s One and Only Live Nitrifying Bacteria enough!
S**E
Absolutely Works
Started 3 29 gallon tanks for a research project in biology.Tank 1: Plain Water with ammonium chloride as ammonia source.Tank 2: APIs Quick Start with ammonium chloride as ammonia source.Tank 3: DrTim's One & Only with ammonium chloride as ammonia source.Ammonium Chloride was purchased from Amazon (DrTim's Ammonium Chloride Solution for Fish-less Cycling). Each tank was prepared with a standard dechlorinator (It is important not to use any product that binds or "locks" ammonia, as it is required for the cycle to progress). Water was allowed to rest for 24 hours, filters and heaters running, temps set to 80.5F, 30 LBS of standard gravel in each tank. Each tank received an initial dose of ammonium chloride of 29 drops (one drop per gallon), which raised ammonia to ~2.0 PPM.Caveats: If you use an API test kit, you will likely see about half the expected ammonia concentration. The test is not accurate at low levels, and does not measure the type of source used as well as other master kits. Be concise with the dosing and you are fine. You can use a Nutrifin NH3/NH4 test or other high grade ammonia detection kit that measures NH3 and NH4. Do not adjust water parameters or add water for several days. If you must adjust water parameters, do so slowly. Water should only be added if it has been allowed to rest after 24 hours once treated with dechlorinator.Results at 6 days:Tank 1: Barely detectable amount of ammonia reduction, zero nitrites, zero nitrates.Tank 2: Some reduction in ammonia, zero nitrites, ~20PPM nitrates.Tank 3: .50 PPM Ammonia, zero nitrites, 50 PPM nitratesTank 3 has had one water change already, and is ready for the second due to rising nitrates. It is processing enough ammonia at this point to equal ~11 inches worth of fish. Ammonia has been added to this tank daily to sustain the cycle, as fish were never going to be introduced. I will be adding fish to this tank however, and reducing ammonium chloride dosing. Decided to keep this tank.Myth 1: There are many posts on the Internet about fish-less cycling. Many of which suggest the use of off-the-shelf ammonia that you find in your local grocery or hardware stores. While some of these sources might be safe, most are not. The ammonium chloride is cheap, and will cycle many, many tanks. Consumers are generally unaware of the fact that not all ingredients need to be listed on products not intended for human consumption. Therefore, they see water and ammonia listed on a label and assume there is no surfactant in the off-the-shelf product. This is simply not the case. Most of these products do in fact contain other ingredients that are not safe for fish, and will destroy the bacteria needed for the aquarium cycle. This can be seen in one of the other reviews. The result was, the tank did not cycle as anticipated. If you want good results and have gone to the expense of purchasing a bacterial additive, spend the extra couple of dollars and get a pure source of ammonia.Myth 2: Some postings on the Internet suggest that these products use terrestrial strains of bacteria. All nitrifying bacteria need soil or other surface. Therefore, all can be considered terrestrial. They are commonly found on the bottom of lakes and streams. Our filters and substrate mimic this environment. While evidence in my experiment suggests that not all products are created equal, some products do work -- and work exceptionally well.Myth 3: The cycle will crash because it isn't the right bacteria. Fact: If the bacteria were unable to sustain, we would not see the substantial growth noted in tank 3. In order for the ammonia to be processes and nitrite to nitrate, a large colony has to exist. Once these bacteria undergo binary fission (how they multiply), there is no logical argument that would support this cycle failing. If you have an environment where they will multiply, that will continue until there is no food source. Any crashing would be the result of that food source not being adequate for the colony. Another possible source of crashing, high nitrates (more than 50-75 PPM) as this will kill the bacteria. It is also possible that once the cycle begins to establish, that the consumer adds too many fish before the colony is large enough to sustain.If you opt for fish-less cycling, use a pure source of ammonia (ammonium chloride). If you opt for fish-in, make sure you do not use an ammonia binding product to dechlorinate the water. Let the water rest for a full 24 hours before you add fish and the product. You may test for ammonia/nitrite/nitrate -- but only adjust your parameters if the results show >2.0PPM Ammonia or >50PPM Nitrate. Other than that, leave it alone for at least a week. If you do need to reduce any of the parameters via a water change (25%), fill your bucket the day before and add your standard dechlorinator to the water and let it rest for a complete 24 hours before adding to the tank. Keep your filters wet at all times (bacteria will die).I consider this product a 5-star purchase. If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to ask.
F**S
This works!
I was so excited when I woke up this morning and saw nitrites in my test tube! Nothing had been changing in my fishless cycle for two weeks, even after using Seachem stability. Finally, I purchased this because I read positive reviews about it, put it in my cycling 5 gallon on Sunday, and not even two days later I have nitrites! Really glad I bought this! Dr. Tims ammonia is also helping a lot with this cycle too! I think I'll stick to dr. tims products for cycling tanks from now on.
N**A
Works fast
Works
B**Y
Highly recommended
I bought this from reading an article, so glad I did, I can highly recommend it, definitely works, I am going try some of Dr Timms other products.
Z**O
Fresh water
Yes best stuff on market I have seen A+++
M**D
Works with the right conditions
It didn't start working on few first days until after doing a little bit of research that I realized I needed some nutrients in my tank to provide enough energy for the bacteria to reproduce. The problem is my case was lack of enough phosphorus and magnesium in water. So, check your local water for traces of these elements if your fishless cycle has stuck and then add pinch of ground fish food into your tank in case of lacking of them in your fish tank water. Check your fish food to make sure it has these two before doing so. If you need more information, search for fishless cycle phosphate block and you'll find more information on this.
A**N
First bottle failed. Second worked in days.
This appears to be dead on arrival from amazon. I have ordered another bottle from an aquatics shop to see if there is a difference. API liquid tests showing 5ppm ammonia and 0ppm nitrite after5 days of daily testing.Update: This product does work well. I bought a second bottle from an aquatics shop and it has worked exactly as described. Over several days I've seen ammonia reduce, nitrite peak and fall off and nitrates building up. This clearly indicates beneficial bacteria have established in the aquarium.I can only assume as others have stated that amazon may not be storing the product correctly (either too warm or perhaps freezing) and therefore killing off the beneficial bacteria during storage.
J**S
Fantastic
I was skeptical at first, having cycled tanks previously taking a minimum of a month i didnt think that this bacteria would do as advertised. However, i recently set up a small 60l aquarium, followed the instructions and less than 24 hours later my ammonia is almost nil. Nitrites still need to drop but usually takes at least 2 weeks for ammonia to drop to nil so already definately worth the money.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 weeks ago