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So what's the general consensus on using undergravel filters? Are they good
or bad? Jen |
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"Jen" wrote in message
... So what's the general consensus on using undergravel filters? Are they good or bad? Jen Well, I've always used them in my tanks, but I suspect the rate at which the water is drawn through them must be incredibly slow. That said, I still use them because I assume they do some good, expecially with "good" bacteria etc built up in the gravel. However I always regard them as secondary only, and install more aggressive "slip on the outside of the tank" filters. To sum up - under-gravel filters beneficial, but don't rely on them as your main filtration. Others on the group here who are more experienced than me may want to comment too. Hope this helps. -- Peter in New Zealand. (Pull the plug out to reply.) Collector of old cameras, tropical fish fancier, good coffee nutter, and compulsive computer fiddler. |
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Jen wrote:
So what's the general consensus on using undergravel filters? Are they good or bad? They work and are still a reliable filtration method, but somewhat higher maintenance. I used to use them for many years. I don't think I'd use them with goldfish. Just too much waste. With an external filter, like a canister (or HOB or wet/dry) you get the wastes out of the tank into a place you can easily clean up, and with goldfish you need to do that a bit. With other fish it's not so bad, but the same applies. If you are willing to do very regular gravel vacuuming and maybe break down the tank every couple of years, then UGF is fine. It's a good biofilter, but you can replace it with enough media in some other filtration system. It's a personal choice. |
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Use a canister filter and NO GRAVEL - no waste at all building up in the
bottom of the tank - as long as you have other structures in the tank that bacteria can colonize on (rocks, etc.) the benefits that the gravel bed were providing will be taken care of - and no more of that pain in the neck gravel vacuuming. "amosf © Tim Fairchild" wrote in message ... Jen wrote: So what's the general consensus on using undergravel filters? Are they good or bad? They work and are still a reliable filtration method, but somewhat higher maintenance. I used to use them for many years. I don't think I'd use them with goldfish. Just too much waste. With an external filter, like a canister (or HOB or wet/dry) you get the wastes out of the tank into a place you can easily clean up, and with goldfish you need to do that a bit. With other fish it's not so bad, but the same applies. If you are willing to do very regular gravel vacuuming and maybe break down the tank every couple of years, then UGF is fine. It's a good biofilter, but you can replace it with enough media in some other filtration system. It's a personal choice. |
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I have always used U/G filters in conjunction with an outside filter,
aside from the beneficial bacteria they hold, they are also great if you want to have live plants in your tank. |
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![]() "Jen" wrote in message ... So what's the general consensus on using undergravel filters? Are they good or bad? ============== I gave them up years ago. They're too hard to keep clean. -- ZB.... Frugal ponding since 1995. rec.ponder since late 1996. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~~ }((((({* |
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![]() "Jen" wrote in message ... So what's the general consensus on using undergravel filters? Are they good or bad? Thanks to all the replies. I'll think when I change over to tropical I'll take it out, and see how it goes. Jen |
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![]() Jen wrote: So what's the general consensus on using undergravel filters? Are they good or bad? Jen I have used UGFs extensively over the years. I personally do not recommend them do to the extra maintenance sometimes needed (especially with flat plate UGFs), especially if poorly cared for. But UGFs do not deserve all the flack they get either. Proper gravel (#3) with about 2-3" of depth works best. The Nektonics UGF was actually very good and I actually clocked higher flow rates with the same air pump with these UGF filters vs. the more common flat plate design (placing a 1 gallon jug just under the out flow and timing the rate of fill). There are better filters now, but even some newer ones popularity are based in hype (bio wheel comes to mind). I recommend redundancy with two filters. In a smaller aquarium a HOB with an internal or sponge filter is effective, or at least a HOB with a pre filter attached for improved bio filtration. For more aquarium filtration information: http://www.americanaquariumproducts....iltration.html Also I have an article about Bio Wheels he http://aquarium-answers.blogspot.com/ Carl |
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http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/c...re1.htm#GRAVEL
GRAVEL Gravel is not recommended for keeping goldfish. 1. Gravel is the leading cause of sudden death when gravel gets stuck in their throat. 2. Food drifts down into gravel and rots. Goldfish will sift and work thru the gravel looking for food. Rotting food is toxic for goldfish. 3. Gravel creates "dead" spots where anaerobic bacteria thrive and secrete toxic gases. 4. Organic compounds contribute to the waste in the tank, driving up nitrate levels. High organic loads in gravel can easily equal the waste output of an extra fish for two which drastically lowers the "carrying capacity" of the tank (1 gf per 10 gallons). 5. Organic compounds are acidic and can lower the pH to the point that it kills off the biobugs. The nitrite converting bacteria are the first to die, which causes a nitrous acid spike. This will cause a sudden crash that kills the entire biofilter. Unlike cycling, where the keeper knows and is checking for wastes and changing water, sudden crashes are not detected until the fish are showing severe symptoms. 6. It is more work to clean gravel and do water changes. Any gravel or rocks on the bottom require a bell of some kinds to suck up debris that gets caught under the items. In a bare bottom tank, the circulation of the water in the tank means all the crud and wastes are sucked out by the filter intake. There is no siphoning required. 7. Fish can be sucked up into a siphon bell and be maimed or killed every time the gravel is cleaned. When there is no gravel to clean, a nylon sockie can be put over the siphon and even fry wont get sucked out with the waste water. "Jen" wrote: So what's the general consensus on using undergravel filters? Are they good or bad? Jen ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/ sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?...s=Group+lookup www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website. I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan |
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