Terry you seem to be well versed on this topic and your opinion is valued. But let me add/ask you some things.
Keep in mind I kept my explanation very simple. I think that most people including myself do not think of hyposalinity as a 3 week procedure. The only fish that I have seen respond to hyposalinity are large mature (stronger) fish. Would you agree that it is much easier to treat a larger fish then a smaller fish? And since most people in the hobby have smaller fish I believe this is the least successful treatment only because of the smaller fish being treated. And I do not believe in hospital tanks because they are only set up properly 1% of the time.
And after I reread my statement I must correct myself. Healthy fish can get ick when a stress factor has been placed on them. The perfect example would be when moving a healthy fish from an established tank it has lived in comfortably for sometime. I have seen this often with Powder Blue Tangs.
But I have never seen a healthy fish just get ick? There is always a factor you can attribute the ick breakout to. Whether it be water parameter change (temp, PH, Nitrate, etc....),light schedule change, poor or missed feedings, and adding of a new aggressive tankmate or an old tankmate becomes aggressive.
Like I said earlier you seem very knowledgeable on this subject but in order for the ick to attach itself to the fish, the fish's slime coat needs to be depleted. Do you agree with me there? (still keeping my explanation simple)
How can you explain a tank full of fish and only one of them have ick? And I am talking larger tanks 180gal+ with multiple surgeons/rabbits/angels. Have you not seen this? With the ick full blown and waterborne why doesn't all the fish get attacked?
If you say freshwater dips with their change of specific gravity will not cause the ick to explode, then what exactly do they accomplish. If what you say is true I see no purpose for a freshwater dips.
How long do you think can ick survive dormant in the sandbed? And what chance do you give a fish that has been infected with ick removed and treated properly whether by copper or hyposalinity only to be place in the same tank with the dormant ick? What has changed in the tank that will not cause another stress induced ick breakout? Only this time the ick will be far worse and almost always lead to death.
I think your work is great and needed but keep in mind a lot of labor
atory controlled experiments only apply to 10-15% of the cases in the hobby. And this is for a myriad of reasons in which I would rather not get in to.
One of the reasons I stopped reading the boards was because it was about 10 different subjects posted 50 times each. Whenever I read a topic on ick (1 of the 10) the first thing I do is check the tank size and the fish type. 99.9999999% of the time the fish has no business being in the tank it is in. Whether the tank is to small, it is placed with non-compatible tankmates, or the fish rarely survives in captivity. Not to mention just poor water quality due to laziness of the owner or some crappy equipment that should not even be sold. I can not tell you how many new customers would come into my store and tell me they do not have a light timer. Or better yet they keep the lights on 24/7.
And like I said earlier I can not remember a single instance where a healthy fish was infected with and killed by ick.
I look forward to your response
Jack