tricksterpup: No of course I would not add salt to a fresh water tank. lol What I was referring to was that for a salt water tank, the salt mix also has trace elements in it that are beneficial to the fish/corals. So what I wanted to know was if adding trace elements to a fresh water tank was also necessary where the water source was pure (ie: lacking any trace elements).
Puma: Yes, I probably do have too many nutrients in the tank. I assumed that was from the tap water. I have no idea what the TDS is, but I will be getting a refractometer at some point. I do use water conditioner, but that only neutralizes chlorine and chloramine. Does not remove phosphates and other things that algae thrives on. Here's the run down on the tank history....
I bought this tank for my son to have in his room (Daddy gets a 90gal reef tank soon hopefully!

). We started out with two Black Mollies after the tank was up and running for a week. Tank began it's cycle. But lasted for over a month without any sign of amonia/nitrite lowering. I think amonia was 1.5 and nitrite was 2.0 or something. Anyways, slowly algae started to grow on everything. Nutrients were probably really high at that point because the fish were NOT active AT ALL. They would hide in the rocks all day and would hardly eat either. I backed off on the feeding to just a tiny pinch once a day. Maybe it was too little too late though. Tank was so bad (algae wise) that I had to basically start over. I drained the water right down to the gravel, cleaned EVERYTHING in the tank as best I could (old tooth brushes) and refilled. Unfortunately, before I tore it down we lost one of the Mollies.

He was the one that would not come out of the rocks at all. He might have starved himself.

The other one would come out for a minute or two to nibble on some food. But that was it. Anyways, after it was back up, we got an algae eater and two Neon Tetras. The Molly that survived was extatic to get new tank mates! He was swimming around and looked to be doing much better. He hangs out with the algae eater sometimes, and even has picked up his habbits of munching on stuff on the gravel and rocks!

Oh, I also upgraded filters from a Whisper Mini to a Penguin 125 with BIO-wheel. I was hoping the bio wheel would add to the beneficial bacteria and hopefully keep the amonia/nitrite levels in check.
Well, things have been going MUCH better. Amonia came back up to about 0.5, but last time I checked (two days ago) it was on it's way back down. Yeah!

Nitrite was around 1.0 I think and should be going down as well (gona check tonight). Nitrate is around 8 to 9. I'm still getting some algae growing in the tank though. When I do the water change tomorrow I'm going to take out some of the plants (oh these are fake btw, no live plants in the tank) and scrub them again. But I want to keep this stuff from coming back! That's why I was thinking of using a better water source.
Sorry for the book! lol But that's how it's gone so far.
Brian