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Reddit mentions of Dr. Tim’s Aquatics Ammonium Chloride Aquarium Treatment for Fishless Cycling – Chlorine Free, Fish Tank Cleaner for Saltwater, Freshwater, Reef Aquariums – 100% Natural – 2 Oz.

Sentiment score: 21
Reddit mentions: 45

We found 45 Reddit mentions of Dr. Tim’s Aquatics Ammonium Chloride Aquarium Treatment for Fishless Cycling – Chlorine Free, Fish Tank Cleaner for Saltwater, Freshwater, Reef Aquariums – 100% Natural – 2 Oz.. Here are the top ones.

Dr. Tim’s Aquatics Ammonium Chloride Aquarium Treatment for Fishless Cycling – Chlorine Free, Fish Tank Cleaner for Saltwater, Freshwater, Reef Aquariums – 100% Natural – 2 Oz.
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    Features:
  • FISHLESS CYCLING AQUARIUM CLEANING TREATMENT: The ammonium chloride solution from DrTim’s Aquatics offers a chlorine-free method for sanitizing new aquaria or when cycling water when fish or coral are not present. This powerful solution makes fishless cycling mess free.
  • REMOVES HARMFUL TOXINS FROM SALTWATER FISH TANKS: Even with regular water changes and maintenance, aquariums and fish tanks produces bad bacteria and it can take up to 30 days to eliminate waste. When using this ammonium chloride solution for fishless cycling with DrTim’s Aquatics One & Only, you can instantly create a bio filter to remove nitrite and toxic ammonia naturally.
  • 100% NATURAL, ECO-FRIENDLY FISH TANK CLEANER: There’s no need to wait when treating your new saltwater aquarium or freshwater fish tank with this ammonium chloride solution and One & Only from DrTim’s Aquatics. This fish tank cleaner eliminates new tank syndrome and does not include sulfur or other offensive odors.
  • AQUARIUM SUPPLIES YOU NEED: Offer your pet fish and corals an environment in which they can thrive with this ammonium chloride solution that cleans with just four drops per gallon. Ammonium chloride from DrTim’s Aquatics is available in 2 and 4 ounce sizes.
  • HIGH-QUALITY AQUARIUM PRODUCTS: DrTim’s Aquatics offers an expansive line of aquarium products used by professionals and residential customers. Based on years of experience in marine biology, DrTim’s Aquatics’ products utilize his vast knowledge and are backed by scientific evidence and innovative research.
Specs:
Colornq
Height1.75 Inches
Length3.75 Inches
Number of items1
Size2 oz
Weight0.125 Pounds
Width1.75 Inches

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Found 45 comments on Dr. Tim’s Aquatics Ammonium Chloride Aquarium Treatment for Fishless Cycling – Chlorine Free, Fish Tank Cleaner for Saltwater, Freshwater, Reef Aquariums – 100% Natural – 2 Oz.:

u/Oucid · 8 pointsr/Aquariums

You need to add ammonia, which is what the bacteria eat and process basically. Live animals produce ammonia through their waste, but we dont want to subject those animals to toxic ammonia levels.

We use fish food or pure ammonia instead, I ordered a bottle of Dr. Tims ammonia from amazon and use it when I cycle my tanks.

You can test your ammonia levels with a test kit, API freshwater master test kit is a decent kit, strips are another option but they’re harder to read and its very easy to get an inaccurate reading. You need a test kit to know when its safe to add animals.

Here’s some links/stuff that may help,

Info -

Nitrogen Cycle: https://fishlab.com/nitrogen-cycle/

Fishless Cycling: https://www.buildyouraquarium.com/how-to-fishless-cycle/

Supplies -

API Freshwater Master Test Kit 800-Test Freshwater Aquarium Water master Test Kit https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000255NCI/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_cEpvDb8R85Q1K

DrTim's Aquatics - Ammonium... https://www.amazon.com/dp/B006MP4QG6?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share

(Ammonia, aka food source for bacteria during cycling. I prefer this instead of using the fish food method because easier to dose and less messy. It’s around 2-3 drops per gallon to get to around 2-3ppm ammonia)

Note: Never replace your filter media unless you absolutely need to (like if it’s breaking down or contaminated or something). It can be cleaned with old tank water once a month or when needed. Just swish it around or squeeze it in the water and it should be good to go! After the tank is cycled, weekly water changes of 15-25% using a gravel vacuum would be sufficient - but this also depends on how big your tank is and what you keep in it as well. So it may vary.

u/DominusAssassin · 5 pointsr/bettafish

I am using Dr Tim’s ammonia chloride here. It has dosing instructions to reach a specific concentration of ammonia. That being said, I am still working on processing nitrite and the tank has been cycling for about a month so be patient with it. Hope this helps!

u/BettaFeesh · 5 pointsr/Aquariums

You should not start out using any PH regulating chemicals. Especially so in such a small water volume. What's your PH from the tap? PH crashes will reset your cycling. I don't know exactly how neutral regulator works but it could be stalling your cycle. Have you tested your tap water before using a conditioner? Check it for ammonia, you might have chlorimines to deal with. This will make cycling take longer.

Too much ammonia can stunt the growth of your bacteria. do a 50% water change and get it down to 2ppm. Then get this: https://www.amazon.com/DrTims-Aquatics-Ammonium-Chloride-Solution/dp/B006MP4QG6/ref=sr_1_9?crid=3BZ1CMMNFZIB7&keywords=ammonium+chloride&qid=1572890565&sprefix=ammonium%2Caps%2C146&sr=8-9

Dose your tank back up to 2ppm ammonia once it's consumed, Once you start seeing Nitrite then you know your cycle is going


Are you testing with strips or a drop kit?

Get that pothos plant out of there, it's not aquatic and it's polluting your water. Most people stick them in the HOB filter so only the roots are immersed.

u/cjeanne7 · 4 pointsr/Aquariums

You should look into getting it filtered and cycled.

Get something like this and put in some of this in the tank. You can hook the filter up to something like this. There should be more info in the side bar and check out r/bettafish

u/GalactusIntolerant · 4 pointsr/PlantedTank

Hey OP so I hate to be a bit of a buzzkill here, but you might want to check out aqadvisor, I looked at your stock list and for a tank that size it would be severely overstocked and you would be dealing with a lot of aggression from your fish.

I don't know much about angelfish, but I think they're supposed to be pretty aggressive, making it difficult to keep with other fish. Some gouramis might be great, but they can get pretty aggressive too. I have one right now and he doesn't play too nicely with my black phantom tetras sometimes.

Oh, are you doing a fishless cycle? Remember that Eco complete has no nutrients in it so it won't leach ammonia. This means that you will have to dose the ammonia yourself, I know Amazon sells Dr Tims ammonia chloride that is suitable for aquarium use. If you do use something else, make sure that it doesn't have surfactants in it, meaning that it doesn't make lots of bubbles when you shake it, surfactants are harmful to your aquarium!

Since your substrate won't leach ammonia, you will need to make sure that you dose your substrate too or your water column. I didn't know this going into my tank and I am having all sorts of algae problems now myself, I think that I've run out of nutrients in the substrate.

You also might want to take your driftwood out of your tank and scrub and boil it for a few hours to make it completely safe for your aquarium. This will also solve your floating problem!

Anyways, that was a lot and I hope you were able to bear with me! I think that you have a good start and it's looking pretty promising. I think that you've arranged the driftwood quite nicely and I hope you'll post pics when it grows it. Looking good, I hope this helps!

u/Wakenbake585 · 4 pointsr/Aquariums

You have to cycle the tank first. To start the cycle you need to add ammonia. Typically take around 6weeks for a full cycle.

Read this to learn how and why to cycle.


Here is ammonia drops


Here is API Master Test Kit which you will need to monitor water while cycling and afterwards.

u/craschnet · 4 pointsr/Aquariums

If you don't have fish yet, pure ammonia is best. If you already have fish, feed daily and do 50% (or even 75% water change till ammonia and nitrites are 0 PPM and you see nitrates (unless you have a planted tank, where you might not see any nitrates at all).

https://www.amazon.com/DrTims-Aquatics-Ammonium-chloride-bottle/dp/B006MP4QG6\

or

https://www.amazon.com/Fritz-Aquatics-Ammonium-Chloride-Treats/dp/B00OTH5TAQ

u/t0mbombadil · 3 pointsr/bettafish

Thank you!

Mr. Aqua 12g Long Tank (standard glass)

Keynice Digital Thermometer

NICREW ClassicLED Plus

Hygger Submersible Heater

Fluval C2 Power Filter

Dr. Tims Ammonia Chloride (for cycling)

Vintage Dark Brown Console Table (for stand)

(Seachem Flourite, Standard Aquarium Gravel, Polished River Rocks, Black Glass Rock, Blue Glass Rock)

(Monte Carlo, Dwarf Hair Grass, Red Pearl Amazon Sword)

u/MiniMoose12 · 3 pointsr/Aquariums

Then it was likely just widely different water parameters. Anyways if you want to seed ammonia I recommend this 6$ thing off amazon. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006MP4QG6/ . Yeah it's a smallish container compared to what you can buy in stores, but finding straight ammonia is pretty hard. (Alot of them have soap and crap in them). This stuff works pretty good for seeding it. Im currently cycling two 10g with it right now.

Also throwing fish in to seed ammonia is being impatient lol. You're risking fish for the benefit of not having to wait 3-6 weeks.

u/apistia714 · 3 pointsr/Aquariums

it's my pleasure. you can find plain ammonia at wal-mart. just make absolutely certain-- CERTAIN-- you only use ammonia that is free from dyes, fragrances, and surfactants (soap). you can also buy this http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006MP4QG6/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1 it's unspoiled ammonia in a dropper bottle. also make sure you have this http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000255NCI/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 don't use strips for testing as they're unreliable.

u/smallwhitegirl · 3 pointsr/Aquariums

http://www.amazon.com/DrTims-Aquatics-Ammonium-chloride-Aquarium/dp/B006MP4QG6/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1418867330&sr=8-5&keywords=ammonia&pebp=1418867343024

I've heard good things about this stuff but be aware that if you test your water using the API freshwater kit it won't be able to detect the low ammonium levels (NH4) only ammonia (NH3) so I would just follow the directions on the bottle and only test for nitrites.

u/echoskybound · 3 pointsr/bettafish

I would actually establish his 5-gallon tank with a fishless cycle, and set him up a small temporary "hospital tank" to treat the fin rot in the meantime.

I always prefer to move my fish to a small, bare tank for medication that doesn't have an established filter, because medication can crash your cycle. So for his permanent home, I would start on a fishless cycle by setting everything up with the gravel, filter, etc and add some ammonia like this to get the fishless cycle going. You can follow the directions on the bottle and use your water test kit to test for ammonia in the water to determine when the cycle has established, and ammonia levels are safe again.

While the tank is cycling, set up a medicated hospital tank (in fact you can do this now before you set up his man tank so that you can start treating his fin rot before it gets too severe.) Set up a small bare tank with a heater set to about 80 degrees fahrenheit/about 26 celcius. Add a little freshwater aquarium salt, and dose an antibacterial medication like Melafix for the fin rot.

Hospital tanks shouldn't have carbon filters, since carbon will just remove medications. You simply need to do daily water changes with clean, treated water (I recommend Seachem Prime for dechlorination and removing heavy metals. Even better if the water is also carbon filtered.) Remember when you change water you have to add medication and salt back in. You can add a small sponge filter to a hospital tank if you want just to keep water flowing and to filter out debris, I use this little filter for my hospital tank.

Lastly, but still very important: When you move him, you'll have to acclimate him slowly. Bag him up in a Ziplock bag with the water from his vase. Float the bag in the hospital tank (preferable already at 80 degrees) so that he can slowly acclimate to the temperature, and add a little bit of the hospital tank water to his bag every 5 to 10 minutes. I would take about 30 minutes to let him acclimate before releasing him in the tank. Acclimation is important because temperature and parameter change can cause shock.

What a tough little guy. I'm impressed he's been able to pull through in these terrible conditions. That water must be absolutely toxic. Best of luck to you in helping him pull through!

u/Dd7990 · 3 pointsr/bettafish

Hi there,

Please consider my revised additions/changes to your lists as I see some things that could be better/improved. - - - - - PLEASE FISHLESS CYCLE!!!!!- - - -- - http://injaf.org/articles-guides/beginners-guides/the-nitrogen-cycle-and-the-fishless-cycle-getting-your-aquarium-ready-for-fish/

DO NOT BUY that 5g TALL Marina brand tank (I had the smaller 3g version in the past and ended up ABSOLUTELY HATING it because of the built-in internal filter compartment that took space away from the betta + was a pain to maintenance + the flow was difficult to modify)...

I HIGHLY HIGHLY RECOMMEND THE FOLLOWING TANK KITS!!! (They're even cheaper than your other mentioned options and far better for the betta by providing it with much more HORIZONTAL SWIMMING SPACE:

https://www.petsmart.com/fish/starter-kits/top-fin-essentials-aquarium-starter-kit-5262256.html it's ON SALE NOW AT TIME OF MY COMMENT FOR JUST $24.

THE TOPFIN 10g KIT IS GREAT TOO! - FOR JUST $45.49 (Right now at time of comment) - https://www.petsmart.com/fish/starter-kits/top-fin-essentials-aquarium-starter-kit-5262353.html

  • FILTER options for the 5.5g/10g tank kit above:

  1. EITHER the included TopFin HoB filter from the tank kits above - modified via: https://i.imgur.com/QYNiVEV.mp4 - Ditch the carbon cartridge (once you get the stuff to mod the filter) and go for the following supplies: - https://www.amazon.com/Aqua-Clear-A1370A1-Aquaclear-20-Gallon/dp/B0006JLO5K/ - https://www.amazon.com/Aqua-Flo-Aquarium-Filter-Media-Thick/dp/B01J5MV86S/ - https://www.amazon.com/3IN1-BIO-SPONGE-Biochemical-Sponge-QUACLEAR/dp/B00VPL0V0W - The pre-filter intake sponge that you had in your list would be good for this HoB filter that's included in the 5.5g/10g TopFin Essentials kit.
  2. OR this SPONGE FILTER setup (my absolute favorite, HIGHLY HIGHLY RECOMMEND): - https://www.amazon.com/Powkoo-Double-Biochemical-Aquarium-Gallons/dp/B01M3VALFU/ - Petsmart: TopFin Quartz Bioballs (they are perfectly sized to fit into the two dual filter media chambers of the sponge filter I recommended above, plus come in a nice plastic canister for storage). - https://www.amazon.com/U-picks-Aquarium-Gallon-Quietest-Accessories/dp/B07RRNDMXJ/ <--The perfect mini and quiet airpump kit + all accessories to hook up to the sponge filter and run it (quiet airpump, check valve + airline tubing) - (If you have questions about setting this sponge filter stuff up, ask me once you have all the parts in hand. It's very easy.)

u/holtzmanned · 3 pointsr/bettafish

Get a [check valve](Marina Plastic Check Valve https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0002AQIAO/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_.jceAbW5X9VMS) for the sponge filter/air pump tubing so the water doesn’t go back into the pump.

You need an [API freshwater master test kit](API FRESHWATER MASTER TEST KIT 800-Test Freshwater Aquarium Water Master Test Kit https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000255NCI/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_5kceAb9WH26C1) to keep track of ammonia/nitrite/nitrate as you cycle your tank and throughout the life of your tank.

[Dr. Tim’s ammonium chloride](DrTim's Aquatics Ammonium chloride - 2 oz bottle https://www.amazon.com/dp/B006MP4QG6/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_9lceAbCE3EDN2) is optional because you can buy pure ammonia for cheaper at the grocery store, but I used it. It’s an easy way to start and maintain your fishless cycle. Just add 4 drops per gallon of water to bring the ammonia up to 2ppm.

u/ManicWarpaint · 2 pointsr/Aquariums

I've heard this stuff works well although I have no experience with it. I use this on my tanks with API quickstart. I let it sit until all the ammonia is consumed. As long as there is some nitrites still showing up then I drop a few fish pellets in to keep the nitrifying bacteria fed. Once the nitrites drop back to zero I do a 50% WC. After that a weekly 20% PWC. Slowly introducing livestock. Hope that helps

u/blooomseer · 2 pointsr/bettafish

Here’s an inexpensive filter I use and a heater . You’re gonna need a API master test kit. It’s recommended that you cycle your tank. You can do a fishless cycle in which you’ll need ammonia to start the cycle. Or you can do fish-in cycling and add him after you put the water in.
Bettas love plants! Silk or real plants are the way to go, you should avoid plastic because it will rip their fins. if you get real plans i suggest java fern because it’s super hardy

u/lasershurt · 2 pointsr/Aquariums

I've used this product, and it worked great.

u/purerockfury · 2 pointsr/Aquariums

Something like Dr Tims?

I looked at it this morning, but figured if I could expect to wait another day or two for the cycle to start it may not be worth it, but I’m guessing I should pick it up then?

u/KrombopulosC · 2 pointsr/shrimptank

Seachem will not help cycle your tank without an ammonia source to feed the bacteria. Letting a tank run for a month will not cycle either. The bacteria you are trying to cultivate need ammonia and then nitrite to feed off of and grow. I would buy DrTim's Aquatics - Ammonium Chloride Solution for Fishless Cycling - 2 oz Bottle https://www.amazon.com/dp/B006MP4QG6/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_WVdUCbT3KS740 and dose the tank to about 2ppm ammonia continue to keep 1-2ppm present until nitrites return to zero and nitrates are all that show up. Then do a big water change. Do not clean the filter with this change as it will get rid of a good portion of your good bacteria. When you do clean the filter in the future make sure it isn't the same day as a water change. Hope this helps your future skrimps

u/Nosmada22 · 2 pointsr/PlantedTank

I am nearing the end of my 10g planted cycle, I used dr Tim's ordered on amazon. Easy to use, 10 drops per 10g = 2 ppm.

http://www.amazon.ca/DrTims-Aquatics-830-Ammonium-chloride/dp/B006MP4QG6/ref=sr_1_1?s=pet-supplies&ie=UTF8&qid=1421115957&sr=1-1

u/aboxofkittens · 2 pointsr/Aquariums

It’s possible! I’ve had similar stuff happen. But the only way to know for sure is to put actual ammonia in there and test it. Most people say 1ppm/day ammonia removal (with no nitrate spike) means it’s cycled.

Or test your tap water, and if you find it has ammonia (lots of public suppliers use chloramine to keep water clean, which shows up on our tests and is available to the bacteria as ammonia), do a big water change. Check it 24 hrs later; if 0ppm, it’s cycled

You can get ammonia on amazon or at a hardware or grocery store (with the cleaners). Make sure it’s only got ammonia in it.

u/gottagetanotherbetta · 2 pointsr/Aquariums

Forget the fish food, it's too hard to dose properly. Get this or any kind of 100% household ammonia with no additives and use it instead.

u/menmoth50 · 2 pointsr/Aquariums

If you are unsure about your ammonia levels, I would not add fish. Retest, and make sure you follow the instructions on the test kit to the letter. If you are still unsure, but suspect it is zero, you can force an ammonia spike with this stuff, then retest and track your levels with an easier to read ammonia color. Good luck, and I hope your tank is cycled and ready!

u/DylanMcDermott · 2 pointsr/PlantedTank

Using an all-in-one like thrive makes the likelihood of nutrients skewing upwards more likely, but with only plantstock I don't think there's any ethical concerns with that. If that happens you'll have to do water changes to rectify it.

If the volume is large you might as well dose macroferts individually (usually as dry ferts) then you don't have to worry about a run-up, you instead can just stop dosing the relevant nutrient. Also, since you have no livestock, you can dose ammonia (which plants love, in reasonable concentrations) instead of nitrates.

u/Dizzybro · 2 pointsr/PlantedTank

This is what I've used

DrTim's Aquatics Ammonium chloride - 2 oz bottle https://www.amazon.com/dp/B006MP4QG6/ref=cm_sw_r_other_apa_S-5kxbAFHCDW9

u/ipodnano165 · 1 pointr/Aquariums

The local pet store told me to get a fish use it to cycle than bring it back to trade in for my shrimp. It doesnt look like any hardware by me has ammonia I found this though. I can get it in two days. This is what I want right? pure ammonia

u/KrazyKatJenn · 1 pointr/Aquariums

I think it's easier to add Dr. Tim's ammonia for a fishless cycle.

Amazon link: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006MP4QG6/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

On mine it gives instructions right on the bottle for how much to add. Much easier than fish food.

u/zackham · 1 pointr/aquaponics

I'll be fishless cycling starting (hopefully) this weekend and will keep good records of levels and report back here.

This is what I got for ammonia:
DrTim's Aquatics Ammonium chloride for Aquarium (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006MP4QG6/ref=oh_details_o01_s00_i02?ie=UTF8&psc=1)

And I'll be using this and hoping it speeds up cycling:
DrTim's Aquatics One & Only Live Nitrifying Bacteria for Cycling Aquaria (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001LULBXI/ref=oh_details_o01_s00_i00?ie=UTF8&psc=1)

System build details here: http://www.backyardaquaponics.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=18&t=21463&sid=6b2674bbb0c276d950ffce817c475209

u/slimabob · 1 pointr/Aquariums

DRTim's Aquatics Ammonium Chloride Solution. I found it on amazon

u/Ka0tiK · 1 pointr/Aquariums

Amazon would be Dr Tims or the equivalent, here.

I have an Ace Hardware in the area (USA), so I get their Janitorial Ammonia Hydroxide.

u/wallyTHEgecko · 1 pointr/ReefTank

I've read that Walmart's Great Value brand ammonia has extra stuff in it that you don't want to use. Ace Hardware brand ammonia is supposed to be safe though. Or if you wanna be super sure, there's Dr. Tim's Ammonium Chloride.

u/TheLogFather · 1 pointr/Aquariums

I'm looking for some ammonia to help along my fishless cycle, would this household ammonia from amazon work? https://www.amazon.com/Ammonia-6312679-00051-Clear-64oz/dp/B002M8NEDS/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1492647944&sr=8-2&keywords=ammonia

It says it's ammonium hydroxide. Would this be okay?

There are options for fish cycling specifically like this one https://www.amazon.com/DrTims-Aquatics-Ammonium-chloride-bottle/dp/B006MP4QG6/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1492648088&sr=8-1&keywords=ammonia+for+fish+cycling , but it's more expensive and has less. Would this be a better option?

u/foryeve · 1 pointr/bettafish

To cycle the tank you need a source of ammonia. The first set of bacteria will feed off of that, then produce nitrites and so on - what matters is there's an initial source of ammonia.

You can use fish food (though this is messy and imprecise), do a fish-in cycle (risky and stressful to the fish), or use ammonia itself (like this). Here's a quick guide: https://aquariuminfo.org/cycling.html

u/needsaphone · 1 pointr/bettafish

You can get Dr. Tim's ammonia on Amazon.

u/burgeoningpea · 1 pointr/PlantedTank

I was able to cycle my tank in a week using Seachem Stability and this stuff: https://www.amazon.com/DrTims-Aquatics-Ammonium-chloride-bottle/dp/B006MP4QG6

u/bigw86 · 1 pointr/Aquariums

Thanks. I found this stuff on amazon which I think I might use but not sure how much I’ll actually need.

Dr Toms

I think I’ll just play it safe and start my own. What is this seed you’re referring to? I can’t find it listed anywhere. Is it safe to add live plants during this or should I add them at end when I’m adding the fish? I thought of starting the tank with live plants right off the bat during the cycle process.

u/Professional_Bear · 1 pointr/Aquariums

Is this it? if so then I’ll definitely pick some up!

u/MGreymanN · 1 pointr/Aquariums

Are you adverse to buying online? https://www.amazon.ca/DrTims-Aquatics-830-Ammonium-chloride/dp/B006MP4QG6/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1464224598&sr=8-7&keywords=ammonia

There probably are cheaper/better options online but just a quick option for you that I came across.