You turn the filter off to do a water changeYer but I carnt go past where me filter intake is an that is half way
You turn the filter off to do a water changeYer but I carnt go past where me filter intake is an that is half way
You can turn it off because it will only be for a little while you change out the water. The bacteria wont dieBeen told not to turn off my filter av been told for at least 8 weeks
Ok I didn’t no that I will do that thanks I thought I couldn’t do thatYou can turn it off because it will only be for a little while you change out the water. The bacteria wont die
Yeah its fine... All of us do it cause the water line goes too low for it to work properly. Also unplug your heater while doing water changes. If you dont it may burstOk I didn’t no that I will do that thanks I thought I couldn’t do that
Even with a new tank an filter yer thanks didn’t no thisYeah its fine... All of us do it cause the water line goes too low for it to work properly. Also unplug your heater while doing water changes. If you dont it may burst
for your help al try that thenIf the media (sponges, cartridges, ceramic noodles, whatever is inside the filter) are kept wet the bacteria won't die during the time it takes to do a water change. Leaving the filter off for hours or overnight means no water flowing through it bringing food and oxygen to the bacteria, so apart from a short period during water changes, it should be kept running 24/7. This is what people mean when they say a filter should be kept switched on.
Ok thanks al do that today people no fish dead this morning for first time in a week so hopefully something is happening I hopeThey likely meant don’t clean the filter media as you want bacteria to build up in there but by all means that filter can be turned off/unplugged for the time it takes to do large water changes, which are crucial for your tank at this stage.
Edit: oops - looks like I missed several responses, Essjay and Rocky in particular. Anyway, get to water changin’!