I'm using a carbon filter sponge in my tank because I have partly rainwater in the make up of my tank water and understand carbon is best in this instance as it clears any possible organic nasties. A few questions about it:
Can carbon filters be cleaned or do I need to change it to a brand new on each time?
If, as I think, I ned to change it, how often? Once a month? Once a fortnight?
As I understand it the bulk of the good bacteria lurk in the filter sponge. If I'm changing to a brand new filter regularly what about my bacteria levels? Will a new filter impact on my bacteria levels to such an extent that my tank suffers from say high ammnia levels because a large chunk of the bacteria were thrown out with the filter? Or won't having a new filter make any difference as the tank water/substrate will keep things going along until the new filter get's going?
I know people think carbon is chucking money away but I'd rather be safe with my rainwater (have V. high PH from the tap and rainwater seemed a good solution given my tank is a modest 63litres - have posted about the reasoning etc before).
Anyway, I've done a search both here and google and can't really find anything to hand that answers my questions. I'm just worried that binning my filter I'll be binning all the hard earned bacteria too.
Would it be worth cutting off a bit of my carbon filter and putting in a piece of normal sponge that stays there when the carbon one is changed? Obviously I would clean the little piece of normal sponge when needs be, but I figured it may be a way of ensuring my filter system always has something in it with lots of bacteria.
Any ideas?
Can carbon filters be cleaned or do I need to change it to a brand new on each time?
If, as I think, I ned to change it, how often? Once a month? Once a fortnight?
As I understand it the bulk of the good bacteria lurk in the filter sponge. If I'm changing to a brand new filter regularly what about my bacteria levels? Will a new filter impact on my bacteria levels to such an extent that my tank suffers from say high ammnia levels because a large chunk of the bacteria were thrown out with the filter? Or won't having a new filter make any difference as the tank water/substrate will keep things going along until the new filter get's going?
I know people think carbon is chucking money away but I'd rather be safe with my rainwater (have V. high PH from the tap and rainwater seemed a good solution given my tank is a modest 63litres - have posted about the reasoning etc before).
Anyway, I've done a search both here and google and can't really find anything to hand that answers my questions. I'm just worried that binning my filter I'll be binning all the hard earned bacteria too.
Would it be worth cutting off a bit of my carbon filter and putting in a piece of normal sponge that stays there when the carbon one is changed? Obviously I would clean the little piece of normal sponge when needs be, but I figured it may be a way of ensuring my filter system always has something in it with lots of bacteria.
Any ideas?