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Aquaclear Powerhead Quick Filter
Yeah, I bought one. Looked like a neat quick cleaner upper. The
powerhead is an 802 or 70, they've changed numbers somewhere along the way. Instructions and pictures are nearly worthless. When I finally figured out how to put it together and which way to point the yellow and green/red levers and plugged it in at the end of my 55, WHOOSH - a full blown Tsunami and Category 5 hurricane - every plant in the tank immediately hit the ground, praying and trembling. Debris was flying in every direction. The suction at the intake didn't really seem very strong, maybe the micron filter slowed it down? I tried everything I could think of with the clear plastic hose, it just seemed to have the effect of adding air to the water output. Am I doing something wrong or did I just waste 40 bucks? Can anyone tell me where the colored levers are supposed to be to run the quick filter and what I should be doing with the little hose and is there anything to slow it down? Right now I think this would be more appropriate for a swimming pool, not a 55 gallon aquarium. I mean, hey, there are fish in there, flying in circles like a scene from the wizard of Oz - only thing missing is the witch and that cute little doggie. I think it might be time for me to return my wife's credit card to her side of the desk. I think she's thinking that too. -- Mr Gardener |
Aquaclear Powerhead Quick Filter
On Fri, 17 Feb 2006 15:36:12 -0500, Mr. Gardener
wrote: Yeah, I bought one. Looked like a neat quick cleaner upper. The powerhead is an 802 or 70, they've changed numbers somewhere along the way. Instructions and pictures are nearly worthless. When I finally figured out how to put it together and which way to point the yellow and green/red levers and plugged it in at the end of my 55, WHOOSH - a full blown Tsunami and Category 5 hurricane - every plant in the tank immediately hit the ground, praying and trembling. Debris was flying in every direction. The suction at the intake didn't really seem very strong, maybe the micron filter slowed it down? I tried everything I could think of with the clear plastic hose, it just seemed to have the effect of adding air to the water output. Am I doing something wrong or did I just waste 40 bucks? Can anyone tell me where the colored levers are supposed to be to run the quick filter and what I should be doing with the little hose and is there anything to slow it down? Right now I think this would be more appropriate for a swimming pool, not a 55 gallon aquarium. I mean, hey, there are fish in there, flying in circles like a scene from the wizard of Oz - only thing missing is the witch and that cute little doggie. I think it might be time for me to return my wife's credit card to her side of the desk. I think she's thinking that too. -- Mr Gardener The instructions I found d on line were of no help, but they suggest you call them with questions. US 1-800-72HAGEN Canada 1-800-55HAGEN UK 0977 556622 I've used a penguin 660 in a 55 gallon tank, that made lots of current, the Hagen unit is over twice as strong. It might be interesting to build a spray bar thing thing to spread the flow across the width of the tank, it could be appropriate for those fish that prefer a current. |
Aquaclear Powerhead Quick Filter
On Fri, 17 Feb 2006 16:05:14 -0500, Mr. Gardener
wrote: On Fri, 17 Feb 2006 20:56:09 GMT, Charles wrote: On Fri, 17 Feb 2006 15:36:12 -0500, Mr. Gardener wrote: Yeah, I bought one. Looked like a neat quick cleaner upper. The powerhead is an 802 or 70, they've changed numbers somewhere along the way. Instructions and pictures are nearly worthless. When I finally figured out how to put it together and which way to point the yellow and green/red levers and plugged it in at the end of my 55, WHOOSH - a full blown Tsunami and Category 5 hurricane - every plant in the tank immediately hit the ground, praying and trembling. Debris was flying in every direction. The suction at the intake didn't really seem very strong, maybe the micron filter slowed it down? I tried everything I could think of with the clear plastic hose, it just seemed to have the effect of adding air to the water output. Am I doing something wrong or did I just waste 40 bucks? Can anyone tell me where the colored levers are supposed to be to run the quick filter and what I should be doing with the little hose and is there anything to slow it down? Right now I think this would be more appropriate for a swimming pool, not a 55 gallon aquarium. I mean, hey, there are fish in there, flying in circles like a scene from the wizard of Oz - only thing missing is the witch and that cute little doggie. I think it might be time for me to return my wife's credit card to her side of the desk. I think she's thinking that too. -- Mr Gardener The instructions I found d on line were of no help, but they suggest you call them with questions. US 1-800-72HAGEN Canada 1-800-55HAGEN UK 0977 556622 I've used a penguin 660 in a 55 gallon tank, that made lots of current, the Hagen unit is over twice as strong. It might be interesting to build a spray bar thing thing to spread the flow across the width of the tank, it could be appropriate for those fish that prefer a current. I didn't buy it to add circulation, I bought it just for the Quick Filter add on. It looked like it might be a poor man's diatom filter - water polisher. -- Mr Gardener Hot Magnum for that effect, with the micron filter, or the WalMart knock-off if they have it. Forks well, imnsho |
Aquaclear Powerhead Quick Filter
"Charles" wrote in message
... On Fri, 17 Feb 2006 16:05:14 -0500, Mr. Gardener wrote: On Fri, 17 Feb 2006 20:56:09 GMT, Charles wrote: On Fri, 17 Feb 2006 15:36:12 -0500, Mr. Gardener wrote: Yeah, I bought one. Looked like a neat quick cleaner upper. The powerhead is an 802 or 70, they've changed numbers somewhere along the way. Instructions and pictures are nearly worthless. When I finally figured out how to put it together and which way to point the yellow and green/red levers and plugged it in at the end of my 55, WHOOSH - a full blown Tsunami and Category 5 hurricane - every plant in the tank immediately hit the ground, praying and trembling. Debris was flying in every direction. The suction at the intake didn't really seem very strong, maybe the micron filter slowed it down? I tried everything I could think of with the clear plastic hose, it just seemed to have the effect of adding air to the water output. Am I doing something wrong or did I just waste 40 bucks? Can anyone tell me where the colored levers are supposed to be to run the quick filter and what I should be doing with the little hose and is there anything to slow it down? Right now I think this would be more appropriate for a swimming pool, not a 55 gallon aquarium. I mean, hey, there are fish in there, flying in circles like a scene from the wizard of Oz - only thing missing is the witch and that cute little doggie. I think it might be time for me to return my wife's credit card to her side of the desk. I think she's thinking that too. -- Mr Gardener The instructions I found d on line were of no help, but they suggest you call them with questions. US 1-800-72HAGEN Canada 1-800-55HAGEN UK 0977 556622 I've used a penguin 660 in a 55 gallon tank, that made lots of current, the Hagen unit is over twice as strong. It might be interesting to build a spray bar thing thing to spread the flow across the width of the tank, it could be appropriate for those fish that prefer a current. I didn't buy it to add circulation, I bought it just for the Quick Filter add on. It looked like it might be a poor man's diatom filter - water polisher. -- Mr Gardener Hot Magnum for that effect, with the micron filter, or the WalMart knock-off if they have it. Forks well, imnsho *Works well* I think Charles meant (the W key was just out of his reach, but he was going in the right direction). First of all, Mr.Gardener, you might have missed your calling as a writer, thanks for the laugh. My 802 powerhead is an antique (no signage, but I think it's an 802). If it's of any help, there is a sliding plate on mine which cause 2 slots to line up (full power) or not. This turns independently of the rotation of the outlet. I've _also_ heard it has some water-polishing capabilities (with the sponge filter.. but I just use mine for water moving projects). The air line is strictly to feed air into a narrow section of the outlet. The point right after the narrowing causes a low-pressure which draws air in through the airline (if installed), but if you think Dorothy's dog is spinning now ! ;~). You can add some baffles at the output (I've used plastic Hornwort for this). If all else fails, point it directly at the glass. hope something useful for you in all that.. -- www.NetMax.tk |
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