I've been doing this a long time, & given it much thought, & practice over the years... I doubt many would argue that more surface area is better on bio media sources... but I just saw some listed for sale, that I feel isn't a step in the right direction... I used to use porous lava rock, like you would use for a gas grill, or gas fireplace... & was happy with that for years, until I shut my tanks down ( about 20 years ago ) the lava rock was covered in bio slime... I'm sure all the holes were full of beneficial bacteria, however, from what I could see, the water could not get into the pores... in effect, the rocks could have just as well been smooth round river pebbles... when I was shutting down my tanks, sump systems were the rage ( mostly for salt water tanks ) & most of the media was like wiffle golf balls... you don't see that kind of media much in the hobby anymore... however a hollow ball full of larger holes ( large enough to not blind over, so water could flow through them ) has almost twice the surface area of a solid round ball ( or rock )... getting back into the hobby a year & a half ago... ceramic seems to have replaced the plastic biomedia... & I see Seachem offers a porous ceramic media for the filters, & I see similar, in both the Aquaclear 70's I have, as well as the Tidal 75's I have... I don't see any advantage or even less than those old lava rocks I used, as the pores are smaller, that what was in the lava... I've personally been using little ceramic tubes, with 1/4" center holes since I got back into the hobby...
so I'm a little curious why the wiffle golf balls fell from grace??? is it because they aren't natural ( the filter boxes are plastic )... there has to be al least twice the useable surface area for beneficial bacteria, as long as the holes are big enough they don't blind over...
I have a 250 gallon tank I'm hoping to set up this year, & I've been seriously looking at filling the filter chambers with the plastic wiffle golf balls
anyone want to dive in, with knowledge or practical experience...
so I'm a little curious why the wiffle golf balls fell from grace??? is it because they aren't natural ( the filter boxes are plastic )... there has to be al least twice the useable surface area for beneficial bacteria, as long as the holes are big enough they don't blind over...
I have a 250 gallon tank I'm hoping to set up this year, & I've been seriously looking at filling the filter chambers with the plastic wiffle golf balls
anyone want to dive in, with knowledge or practical experience...
Last edited: