David J
Fishaholic
Hi all,
I'm looking for some advice on the flow rate of the water in my tank since installing a new fluval 206 external filter to replace my U2 internal.
My tank has been cycled since February and i have been stocking gradually starting with lemon tetra then glowlight tetra and most recently, panda corys. It was always my intention to switch to an external once I got to around thus level of stocking before adding any more in order to better deal with the bio load.
A couple of days ago I installed the new filter along with a spray bar. I have the spray bar on the left side, flowing across the width of the tank left to right. In order to make it fit I had to shorten the bar. There were 3 holes on the part I sawed off. Once it was installed and switched on I immediately noticed the stronger flow rate of the water and worried that it might be too strong for the fish. I decided to monitor them and after a day I felt it needed to be reduced. Fluval say you can reduce the flow by raising the aqua stop lever upto 50%. I tried this and it certainly reduced the flow but not enough in my opinion so after some reading online I decided to drill and extra hole and widen the existing holes (one drill bit size above what they were).
This reduced the flow to what I feel is more comfortable for the fish. Then, last night, I found a lemon tetra dead. I count them regularly so it must've died in the last couple of hours. As far as I could tell, all my fish have been healthy before this. The dead lemon looked fine, apart from being dead. I couldn't see anything obvious wrong. I posted last night in the emergencies section and the feeling was that it probably wasn't related to the higher flow. Oh, forgot to say that I am currently running bother the new filter and the internal until I was sure the new one was running ok. Once I was sure it was working I was then going to put the mature media in the canister.
So last night I decided to turn off the external and just run the internal until I considered what could have caused the lemon to die. 24 hours later, no more dead fish and I have now switched the external back on.
Below is a link to a short 2 min video of the tank tonight with the external running and I wonder if some of you would mind taking a look and give me your honest opinion on the flow rate. I am also bearing in kind the fact that the internal is adding to the flow and it will be coming out after a couple of days but it doesn't create much current really. Please let me know if you think the fish seem happy enough.
Please could you also comment of the position of the spray bar. You will see that I have the end at the front rised to the surface opposed to the back end which is about an inch under the surface. The reason I did this was to create bubbles to get more oxygen into the water. I have heard many different views on whether you need this. Some say a rippled, unbroken surface is fine. Others say you need to break the surface. I'm confused.
Thanks for reading. I just want to get it right. I'm gutted about losing the lemon last night. They were the first fish in the tank and it was one of the big males which had really beautiful striking colours.
Here's the video, I hope you can access it. I uploaded it to photobucket via my ipad.
[media]http/i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu120/DavMars/IMG_0294.mp4[/media]
Thanks,
David,
I'm looking for some advice on the flow rate of the water in my tank since installing a new fluval 206 external filter to replace my U2 internal.
My tank has been cycled since February and i have been stocking gradually starting with lemon tetra then glowlight tetra and most recently, panda corys. It was always my intention to switch to an external once I got to around thus level of stocking before adding any more in order to better deal with the bio load.
A couple of days ago I installed the new filter along with a spray bar. I have the spray bar on the left side, flowing across the width of the tank left to right. In order to make it fit I had to shorten the bar. There were 3 holes on the part I sawed off. Once it was installed and switched on I immediately noticed the stronger flow rate of the water and worried that it might be too strong for the fish. I decided to monitor them and after a day I felt it needed to be reduced. Fluval say you can reduce the flow by raising the aqua stop lever upto 50%. I tried this and it certainly reduced the flow but not enough in my opinion so after some reading online I decided to drill and extra hole and widen the existing holes (one drill bit size above what they were).
This reduced the flow to what I feel is more comfortable for the fish. Then, last night, I found a lemon tetra dead. I count them regularly so it must've died in the last couple of hours. As far as I could tell, all my fish have been healthy before this. The dead lemon looked fine, apart from being dead. I couldn't see anything obvious wrong. I posted last night in the emergencies section and the feeling was that it probably wasn't related to the higher flow. Oh, forgot to say that I am currently running bother the new filter and the internal until I was sure the new one was running ok. Once I was sure it was working I was then going to put the mature media in the canister.
So last night I decided to turn off the external and just run the internal until I considered what could have caused the lemon to die. 24 hours later, no more dead fish and I have now switched the external back on.
Below is a link to a short 2 min video of the tank tonight with the external running and I wonder if some of you would mind taking a look and give me your honest opinion on the flow rate. I am also bearing in kind the fact that the internal is adding to the flow and it will be coming out after a couple of days but it doesn't create much current really. Please let me know if you think the fish seem happy enough.
Please could you also comment of the position of the spray bar. You will see that I have the end at the front rised to the surface opposed to the back end which is about an inch under the surface. The reason I did this was to create bubbles to get more oxygen into the water. I have heard many different views on whether you need this. Some say a rippled, unbroken surface is fine. Others say you need to break the surface. I'm confused.
Thanks for reading. I just want to get it right. I'm gutted about losing the lemon last night. They were the first fish in the tank and it was one of the big males which had really beautiful striking colours.
Here's the video, I hope you can access it. I uploaded it to photobucket via my ipad.
[media]http/i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu120/DavMars/IMG_0294.mp4[/media]
Thanks,
David,