I'd love to hear the explaination behind less nitrate in an HOB.
More media in a canister to clog and break down into nitrates. Not to mention tubes and any other areas where mulm can build up and decompose.
I'd love to hear the explaination behind less nitrate in an HOB.
yeah, I see the point - I am setting up my first marine tank now and people are telling me I need to find ways to vent CO2, so I guess it all depends on what your goal is.
I do keep large, overstocked African Cichlid tanks and the conventional wisdom you would get out of reading this forum is you must have an awesome canister filter to do this successfully. I would argue against that conventional wisdom. There is more than one way to skin a cat. I love doing maintenance on my tanks, its a labor of love, but that doesn't mean I want to haul around gallons of water and gunk-ridden media. Aside from that, I openly admit that after my Eheim classic (considered holy on this forum, and I readily admit most are probably great) caused a catastrophy it just turned me off all together to that style of filtration.
yeah, I see the point - I am setting up my first marine tank now and people are telling me I need to find ways to vent CO2, so I guess it all depends on what your goal is.
I do keep large, overstocked African Cichlid tanks and the conventional wisdom you would get out of reading this forum is you must have an awesome canister filter to do this successfully. I would argue against that conventional wisdom. There is more than one way to skin a cat. I love doing maintenance on my tanks, its a labor of love, but that doesn't mean I want to haul around gallons of water and gunk-ridden media. Aside from that, I openly admit that after my Eheim classic (considered holy on this forum, and I readily admit most are probably great) caused a catastrophy it just turned me off all together to that style of filtration.
More media in a canister to clog and break down into nitrates. Not to mention tubes and any other areas where mulm can build up and decompose.
More gas exchange. Supposedly the fact that there is surface agitation above the media allows some of the nitrate to dissipate. A canister is enclosed so this isn't allowed.
At least that is what a lot of reefers/marine keepers claim. Like I said originally, it's a "claim" so don't quote me on it. Though I can see it making sense for that reason, as well as the fact that there is a lot more dirt buildup over time in a canister system.
I love the idea of canisters being a nitrate factory for my heavily planted tanks.
I encourage it.
Isn't surface agitation a good thing?
also, the idea that canisters require less maintenance is not one I am buying either. I've used both, and now with my overstocked rift lake tanks I pretty much use fluidized bed filters and the marineland Emperor series - I've never come across a filter that needed less maintenance or was easier to maintain than the marineland. I've completely gone away from canisters all together - all it takes is just ONE time to have an o-ring fail or a hose fail on you, have 75 gallons of water pumped onto your hardwood floor, and it will make you rethink canisters for the rest of your fish keeping life (take my word on that one!)
my rifties certainly haven't filed any complaints since I banish Eheim from my house forever, in fact I wouldn't be surprised if there is something to that nitrate theory, because I've had less algae issues far and away