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Has anyone tried one of these yet? I've used primarily Whispers for
many years, as well as a couple of Aquaclears and I've read all of the debates on the strengths and weaknesses of each and I agree and disagree with all of the agreements and disagreements. The Whisper parts and filter sleeves are easily exchanged between their most common sizes, and I have numerous parts and pieces accumulated over the years in my spare parts and quck repair box. And it's nice to just have to purchase a single size 12 pack of "biofilters." This new Tetretec marks a couple of breakthroughs for Tetra: It is more than twice the price of their regular line and it claims to move 500 gph, making it much more likely to truly manage a 55 gallon tank, rather than just barely almost not quite like the current biggest filter, the Whisper 60, rated for a whopping 60 gallons. I usually find myself adding a second smaller Aquaclear or Whisper to help it along. And finally, the Tetratec is presenting yet another approach to providing the ultimate wet dry biiological filtration in a HOB filter. Personal experience or opinions, anyone? Mr Gardener |
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Bottom posted.
Mr. Gardener wrote: Has anyone tried one of these yet? I've used primarily Whispers for many years, as well as a couple of Aquaclears and I've read all of the debates on the strengths and weaknesses of each and I agree and disagree with all of the agreements and disagreements. The Whisper parts and filter sleeves are easily exchanged between their most common sizes, and I have numerous parts and pieces accumulated over the years in my spare parts and quck repair box. And it's nice to just have to purchase a single size 12 pack of "biofilters." This new Tetretec marks a couple of breakthroughs for Tetra: It is more than twice the price of their regular line and it claims to move 500 gph, making it much more likely to truly manage a 55 gallon tank, rather than just barely almost not quite like the current biggest filter, the Whisper 60, rated for a whopping 60 gallons. I usually find myself adding a second smaller Aquaclear or Whisper to help it along. And finally, the Tetratec is presenting yet another approach to providing the ultimate wet dry biiological filtration in a HOB filter. Personal experience or opinions, anyone? Mr Gardener In my opinion the tetratec filter is the best "beginner" filter. It has all (except for potential as the biowheels have a lot more surface area I think) the benefits of biowheels without the occasional headache or two (i.e. the headaches with biowheels are; small snails can clog biowheels, occasional cleaning is needed; and biowheels might need to be adjusted slightly over a long period of time), but like I said before - I think biowheels (the penguins are good and cheap for beginners while the spray bar biowheels are almost perfect for anyone's biofiltration) have more surface area than the tetratec so biowheels have more potential capacity for a given tank as far as the bioload is sized. I am interested in what anyone else here has to say about the tetratec filters, overall they look really tempting to buy. Good luck and later! |
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