"Alan Silver" wrote in message
news

Hello,
We have a 220 litre cichlid tank that has been running happily for
several months now (see http://fish.alansilver.co.uk/Mark3/). It was
running an Eheim Ecco 2235 filter, but I wasn't happy with it. I had a
lot of trouble every time it needed cleaning (which was far more
regularly than I had expected). I was very unimpressed by the poor
design of this filter and had a lot of trouble restarting it each time.
Well, the final straw came just over a week ago when the priming handle
broke whilst priming the filter. Of course this happened about 5pm on a
Sunday, when all the shops were shut !! I put a Fluval 2 from the other
tank in, just to keep the fish alive until morning. I also dropped all
the sponges from the accursed Eheim rubbish filter (grr) into the tank.
We got a Hydor Prime 30 (http://www.hydor.com/inglese/prime.htm) which
the man in the LFS said he had been selling for about 15 years and was
very happy with. This was a different world from the Eheim. Instead of
hours of frustration and fiddling, it just plugged in and worked !!
Anyway, so we now had a brand new filter running on a fairly well
populated aquarium. There are about 28 2"-3" cichlids in there. I have
left the Fluval 2 in for the moment and have cut back the feeding
whilst
the new filter matures.
My question is (after all that waffling !!) how long do I need to keep
the sponges and Fluval 2 in and how long before I can go back to a
normal feeding regime ? So far all looks well, but I'm being fairly
cautious here. I haven't done a water change since the disaster either.
Any advice or comments welcome. TIA
--
Alan Silver
PSG Fish Tanks - http://fish.alansilver.co.uk/
Hi Alan, is there a way that you could put the Eheim filter media into
the Hydor for a few weeks. That might cycle your tank in a few days, and
the rest of the time is for the bacteria to migrate through the Hydor's
media. Keeping the feeding low is a good idea. If they get too
irritable, drop the temperature a couple of degrees.
Anyway that you do it, your test kit's ammonia and nitrite measurements
will reveal if there is anything out of balance. With your fish load in
a 60g tank, I'd be cautious too ;~)
By the way, your tank looked gorgeous when it was almost empty. When are
you going to add some more recent pictures? I can imagine what it looks
like with 28 cichlids in there, but I'd rather see it

).
--
www.NetMax.tk