Thanks for your nice comments. The moody look is both good and bad. It looks good. It's created by using the spotlights, which doesn't light the background, which is black. But the plants have to be grouped in the center of the tank. Too far off center, and they don't receive enough light.
The Anubias is lightly stuck into the sand. I don't have anything to attach it to right now. I got the Java Ferns from Petco on a coconut mat. The Amano Shrimp made a mess of it, so I cut them off and tossed the mat. I had to rubber band them to a rock for now. They suspiciously look like El Nino instead of Java Ferns but growing conditions are the same for both.
The XP3 doesn't create any problems except for heat raising the temperature. Just with this situation being an acrylic bowl, 16 gallons, average room temperature around 75 degrees, every 4 watts raises the water temperature 1 degree over 3 days. So the XP3 being 24 watts (measured by a "Kill A Watt") raises the water temperature 6 degrees over 3 days. I can't say how much more it would raise the temperature after 3 days, if it would continue rising 2 degrees per day? I had to discontinue the test several times. Because I was doing this while it was hot here, and once the temp got to 86 degrees.
So I got that Cobalt inline pump used in their EXT canister filter. It's only 7.5 watts and would raise the water temperature by less than 2 degrees over 3 days. That pump is weak. It's rated for 210 gallons per hour, but I'd say it only runs 110 gph under the load of the XP3 filter. But it's so weak that it stalls, if a big air bubble goes into it. I have to plug in the built in Rena pump to prime the filter and push out the air bubbles.
Long story about the bowl. But I've had it for years and a glass bowl before this. So maybe 15 years of messing with these bowls. When I got this acrylic one, I made an undergravel filter and used a Maxi Jet 250 power head. It never kept it clean. I added a few mini internal filters and it would still get dirty. Then I found that Cobalt EXT filter with the 7.5 watt pump. I was going to order it, then I remembered I had that XP3 filter in the garage unused from a 60 gallon that I never setup. So I tried it and was blown away by how clean the water was. So I ordered just the Cobalt pump and hooked it up to the XP3. It worked great, except the Cobalt pump is really weak and hard to prime after the weekly water changes. For the out take I connected 2 mini spray bars to a tee connector. Pointed straight up there's almost no current in the tank, even with the Rena pump running.
I then had to combine the undergravel filter with the XP3 to lose the 6 watts from the powerhead, so the total watts would only be 7.5 from the Cobalt. So I connected the short airlift tube to the intake of the XP3. I drilled some small holes in the airlift tube, so maybe 20 percent of the intake would come from above the undergravel filter plate. Because, if 100 percent of intake comes from the undergravel filter, most of the ammonia may be stripped out of the water and this may limit the amount of bacteria in the XP3. Also some of the intake coming from above the filter plate is the only way to filter out the bits floating around in the water. So I run the XP3 on the Cobalt, except for a few hours a day, when I turn on the built in Rena pump to help clean up the floating bits.
This system is very robust. For example, I've forgotten to turn the Cobalt back on, after feeding. Once I left it off for six and a half hours. Twelve hours later the ammonia was .25 ppm. But a day later it was back to 0. I suspect the bacteria on the surface of the sand lived, but the bacteria deeper in the sand and in the XP3 died. So the undergravel filter saved the tank from having to recycle. The biggest improvement to this setup was that I found coarse sand that wouldn't clog the undergravel filter. It's a huge improvement over using gravel.
According to AqAdvisor, the tank is maxed:
6 Kuhli Loach
4 Panda Cory
3 Otocinclus
5 Amano Shrimp (too many because they're eating the plants)
I love this combination of fish, because there's almost no fighting. The shrimp have free range and there's no pressure for them to hide. So they're swimming around and sitting on the sand in the open. They're all getting along, so it's calm and peaceful. I'm lucky to have this tank and enjoy it very much
