Printable Version | Subscribe | Add to Favourites
New Topic New Poll New Reply
Author: Subject: Anyone know about fish tank filters?
davidinhull

posted on 6/2/10 at 12:24 AM Reply With Quote
Anyone know about fish tank filters?

As topic subject - posted here as fish based forums don't have an opinion!!
figure there may me someonehere with an interest

whats the best use of a 400l fluval 4xtwin basket filter?

4 levels split into pairs on each level

as bought, 1st 2 layers crbon packs, next 2 levels, "noodles"

Is there a better combination?

(I don't like the carbon filters and preferbiological filters)

Discuss


D

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
mangogrooveworkshop

posted on 6/2/10 at 12:39 AM Reply With Quote
macspeedy is your man
His employer was http://www.deepseaworld.com/ till recently

macspeedy AT gmail.com

cheers






View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
davidinhull

posted on 6/2/10 at 12:48 AM Reply With Quote
Thanks

they seem as comercial as here
http://sharkdives.blueplanetaquarium.com/

(I'm going for a dip in their tank after I've been in to red sea this year!!)

very nice people but a bit bigger scale than in my house!!






View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
Steve G

posted on 6/2/10 at 01:32 AM Reply With Quote
no tank should need 2 layers of activated carbon!!! Mine has filter floss which is changed weekly, half a layer of carbon and half bio material plus full layer bio in its 3 layers
View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
jeffw

posted on 6/2/10 at 09:14 AM Reply With Quote
You don't need carbon unless you have dosed the tank with some chemicals or medicine.

In my Malawi Cichlid tanks I have Tetra 1200 canister filter/pumps and they have (from the bottom up)

Course mesh pads
Ceramic tubes
Bioballs
fine mesh pads
& finally floss

So it has mechanical filtering (pads) and biological filtering (ceramic tubes & bioballs)

Most canister filters draw water up from the bottom of the canister so remember that when you are layering your media.






View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
mangogrooveworkshop

posted on 6/2/10 at 10:15 AM Reply With Quote
mac built my pond filter out of what we had available. Its a 2500 litre with a load of carp goldies and a few koi. We have no problems apart from one drain that clogs cause of the right angle corners. Its pumped by a hard working machine mart pump thats does the job. Floss and a bed of porous bio bed matter with a mechanical screeding to sift the larger debris.
Clean water comes out and we pump that through a uv light and secondary filter to get the micro particles into more bio balls and back it goes.
the pond is round so we get a circular flow that drives the waste to the central drain...

He worked with the kit till they layed off all the staff who actually new what they were doing..and left the place with a skeleton staff..
Its now run by accountants.......who sold the boat that they used to catch the replacement fish that they display......fish dont last for ever....and the bigger ones eat the mackerel as a matter of course.....so you have to catch some more......trying to get commercial fishermen to catch live stuff is difficult as they are geared up to bring large catches that are dead...

was a place to be proud of now it get more rundown every time we visit and the ticket prices are scary if you are a family...






View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
davidinhull

posted on 6/2/10 at 02:57 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Steve G
no tank should need 2 layers of activated carbon!!! Mine has filter floss which is changed weekly, half a layer of carbon and half bio material plus full layer bio in its 3 layers


The current set up is as it is out of the box

I'm replacing (upgrading) another filter which was all biological filtration, and fully intend to replace the carbon with either sponge type pads or more noodles
I've never used carbon in any of my filters before, and never felt the need






View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
Horizenjob

posted on 6/2/10 at 03:35 PM Reply With Quote
If any of you folks have been using CO2 for your welding, piping a bit of that into your tank makes plants grow really well. I really didn't have any success with plants until I did that. I used an small upside down ashtray or whiskey shot glass to capture the bubbles and then the CO2 dissolves in the water.

Had a little trouble getting the flow slow enough, you just need one bubble every few seconds, but the extra that doesn't fill the glass just bubbles away. A tank of CO2 lasts quite a long time this way. maybe a year or more.

The fish really like the plants too and the plants do a good job of filtering. When this is working well you can see oxygen bubbles forming on the plants...

When the plants got large, I would take them back to the pet store and they would give me a credit of $30 or so for a nice big plant.

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
Agriv8

posted on 6/2/10 at 05:12 PM Reply With Quote
In mt Juwel H filter I run

Filter wool ( swapped every week )

1 corse
1 gravel
1 medium
1 fine

Ps run Co2 with a second powerhead and a twirly thing that increases the Co2 water mix. end up binning plants.

The only woed of warning with co2 is you can serioulsy change the PH of you water so check it regulaly

regards

agriv8





Taller than your average Guy !
Management is like a tree of monkeys. - Those at the top look down and see a tree full of smiling faces. BUT Those at the bottom look up and see a tree full of a*seholes .............


View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member

New Topic New Poll New Reply


go to top






Website design and SEO by Studio Montage

All content © 2001-16 LocostBuilders. Reproduction prohibited
Opinions expressed in public posts are those of the author and do not necessarily represent
the views of other users or any member of the LocostBuilders team.
Running XMB 1.8 Partagium [© 2002 XMB Group] on Apache under CentOS Linux
Founded, built and operated by ChrisW.