I actually have a little bottle of betta conditioner that dispenes in drops. Im going to wash that out really good and use that. So its 8 drops per gallon? I'm too much of a worry wart to put unconditioned water into the tank via a python as well. I rather do it gallon by gallon but then again I don't have huge tanks either.
I'm talking about Seachem Prime vs. Seachem Pond Prime. I went looking and actually found my own answer. They are the same; the Pond version just has different dosing based on usage (NOT product strength).
This is an old FAQ from Seachem (had to use archive.org to see it), but it explains that they are the same product:
I personally measured it before. 0.1ml is somewhere between 2 drops and 3 drops from the smallest prime bottle.
We add 3 drops per each gallon which might be a slight overdose but I believe it is OK.
I actually have a little bottle of betta conditioner that dispenes in drops. Im going to wash that out really good and use that. So its 8 drops per gallon? I'm too much of a worry wart to put unconditioned water into the tank via a python as well. I rather do it gallon by gallon but then again I don't have huge tanks either.
i also use oral syringes (no needles). You can get them free at almost any pharmacy. I have ones from Target, Walgreens, Rite Aid, etc. Just ask the person at the pharm dept for an oral syringe that can measure increments of 0.1mL
Prime is awesome. It also says on the bottle "To detoxify nitrite in an emergency, up to 5 time normal dose may be used."
Believe me, I have used the emergency dose when I've had nitrite spikes in my 10 gallon tank. My occupants have suffered no ill effects at all.
The emergency dose buys you some time to do a water change. Ammonia and nitrites can be detoxified for up to 24 hours, but then you must do the water changes to get rid of the ammonia and nitrites in your tank.