Elsha
New Member
While being sucked into buying a second tank at my LFS today (I was only going in to price things up, honest...) I also picked up a cheap hang-on filter, which I've been meaning to get for my 15-gal for a while now. The price was pretty good, too; NZ$20 reduced down from NZ$176. I'm not sure how much that would translate to in the US or UK, but suffice it to say that $20 is the price of a paperback book here.
The trouble, however, is that this is a massive filter - it's called the Aquamaster 400, and it's intended for a 30 to 100 gallon tank, with a claimed flow rate of 400 gallons an hour. Since my rasboras and tetras seemed to be a bit startled by the 200 litre/hour hang-on filter I've put in their tank to cycle, they're definitely going to be stunned by this! My partner reckons he can either set up a barrier that will minimise the flow rate, or fiddle around with the motor and slow it down. (He's a computer engineering student and our flatmate is in electrical engineering. No electrical item is safe.)
My question is, really, is this feasible? Or is this filter just too damn big for the tank? I incline to the latter opinion, especially since our undergravel filter is working just fine, and I'm quite happy to put this new filter away against a tank suited to its size. Hey, it gives me an excuse to get a tank that size. But I'd also love to know if I'm wrong, or if anyone has any ideas on how to adapt it (preferably not involving resistors, capacitators, and experimental electrical set-ups next to my fishtank.)
The trouble, however, is that this is a massive filter - it's called the Aquamaster 400, and it's intended for a 30 to 100 gallon tank, with a claimed flow rate of 400 gallons an hour. Since my rasboras and tetras seemed to be a bit startled by the 200 litre/hour hang-on filter I've put in their tank to cycle, they're definitely going to be stunned by this! My partner reckons he can either set up a barrier that will minimise the flow rate, or fiddle around with the motor and slow it down. (He's a computer engineering student and our flatmate is in electrical engineering. No electrical item is safe.)
My question is, really, is this feasible? Or is this filter just too damn big for the tank? I incline to the latter opinion, especially since our undergravel filter is working just fine, and I'm quite happy to put this new filter away against a tank suited to its size. Hey, it gives me an excuse to get a tank that size. But I'd also love to know if I'm wrong, or if anyone has any ideas on how to adapt it (preferably not involving resistors, capacitators, and experimental electrical set-ups next to my fishtank.)