was close to it but thought I’d try the request mode again just to see if peace could win out finally, my gosh.
My goal this month is to not post in anyone’s thread who doesn’t want me to.
I don’t want to argue with MN here due to prior issues searches will show, but he asked something above readers may indeed want to know. It’s worth a review for them so we don’t get confused. Too bad we can’t get along — this is the kind of dialogue that builds but I won’t take the chance of destructive retort here so am speaking to readers in general but in acknowledgement of MN’s poke…it brings up a legit question.
Why do most cycles today get a ten day wait vs the 30 days here?
This thread here about the microbiology of cycling is six years old.
current cycle study threads, how to unstick any seemingly stuck cycle, are from 2020 and reflect six years of practice much was collected here. That updated thread reflects the advent of seneye nh3 tracking, which we didn’t have for this thread.
we had biology and prediction, but zero ways to confirm measure. We winged it, bro, is the answer lol.
Exactly like a Moore’s law exists that will put eighty billion transistors on a chip in 2028 where as today we can only fit twenty billion, things advance. Digital reflection vs everything being half green half yellow gave me patterns for much quicker compliance dates than back in the day.
The concept of ready rocks, group B here, and dry rock cycling / group A here was not well described in 2016
heck LRT you know in 2020 ish we barely got around to referring to these distinctions
so the major themes in this old post are
-at thirty days any random boosted stew is ready, no stalls happen beyond 30 days and that still holds true in today’s works although the ticker is usually ten days. Still thirty for mb7, it’s slow like tortoise heh they had five years to speed it up lol maybe with some seneye study it’ll get a quicker average ready date. It’s the rarest used cycling bac
-zero nitrite ever we didn’t care about it. This marks seven straight years of advising to not own a nitrite kit, same holds for my cycle threads of today. We’ve been testing Randy’s advice now for a long time
-we describe here how group b rocks never get bottle bac added, group A dry rocks do, this thread here hoped to be the first to distinguish cycle procedure based on known history of substrate.
My goal this month is to not post in anyone’s thread who doesn’t want me to.
I don’t want to argue with MN here due to prior issues searches will show, but he asked something above readers may indeed want to know. It’s worth a review for them so we don’t get confused. Too bad we can’t get along — this is the kind of dialogue that builds but I won’t take the chance of destructive retort here so am speaking to readers in general but in acknowledgement of MN’s poke…it brings up a legit question.
Why do most cycles today get a ten day wait vs the 30 days here?
This thread here about the microbiology of cycling is six years old.
current cycle study threads, how to unstick any seemingly stuck cycle, are from 2020 and reflect six years of practice much was collected here. That updated thread reflects the advent of seneye nh3 tracking, which we didn’t have for this thread.
we had biology and prediction, but zero ways to confirm measure. We winged it, bro, is the answer lol.
Exactly like a Moore’s law exists that will put eighty billion transistors on a chip in 2028 where as today we can only fit twenty billion, things advance. Digital reflection vs everything being half green half yellow gave me patterns for much quicker compliance dates than back in the day.
The concept of ready rocks, group B here, and dry rock cycling / group A here was not well described in 2016
heck LRT you know in 2020 ish we barely got around to referring to these distinctions
so the major themes in this old post are
-at thirty days any random boosted stew is ready, no stalls happen beyond 30 days and that still holds true in today’s works although the ticker is usually ten days. Still thirty for mb7, it’s slow like tortoise heh they had five years to speed it up lol maybe with some seneye study it’ll get a quicker average ready date. It’s the rarest used cycling bac
-zero nitrite ever we didn’t care about it. This marks seven straight years of advising to not own a nitrite kit, same holds for my cycle threads of today. We’ve been testing Randy’s advice now for a long time
-we describe here how group b rocks never get bottle bac added, group A dry rocks do, this thread here hoped to be the first to distinguish cycle procedure based on known history of substrate.
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