I'm surprised more people haven't chimed in on this. Probably due to the initial title of the thread. If everyone really thinks I'm making a huge mistake I need to call my custom aquarium guy and get him to start drilling holes or building chambers lol.
Ring ring ring
With your tank and intended inhabitants, I'd suggest a sump. That said, I've never kept either aro's or rays.
Sounds like the sump is great but more work and more potential for failure. With 6 fish or less in 300gallons it seems like a sump is more overkill than 2 legit canisters. Has anyone really had terrible results from two FX6's??? Ahhh
Sumps have a higher initial investment of time to set them up, but the regular maintenance is lower than filtration methods such as HOBs and canisters. Eventually the time invested in the sump will catch up to the plug-and-play filtration methods and you'll be happy to have a sump. I'm not comfortable saying that the risk of failure is higher for one or the other... if you have two return pumps in the sump I'd say you're in good shape.
**** it im getting a sump I hate you guys. Once and for all what is your opinion on the best way to set up the actual intake outake so it's least visible in the tank but still effective?
You will be happy with the sump
I can read quite well and perceive intentions for myself. I agree that the comments about media were made mostly not because large amounts are needed but because they were a way of attack on my statements. I just played your game afterwards
I am surprised that you think I am upset over it because I in fact enjoyed it
I think its about time I stop. Thanks for the compliments I quite like your poly tank with red sand
I hope instead of just stating things for facts, people chime in with pictures of their setups and history of the fish inhabitants. That will give a better idea of how well a set up is functioning...
C
Coryloach
tagged me in
J
jaws7777
!!
What it boils down to here is that different filtration methods provide different costs/benefits and you have to balance those costs/benefits when choosing your filtration method. I doubt this is controversial.
We have centralized our tanks into one location, so we are using centralized filtration methods. We have an air pump that runs sponge filters on all of our tanks >5 gallons. All of our tanks have a heavy bio-load, but one tank has a particularly heavy load, so it has an FX6 canister filled with bio-media as a supplement. Bi-weekly 75% WC.
Our new rack, which is not fully functional yet, is fully outfitted for air-driven filtration but this capacity will only be used if a tank needs to be isolated. Otherwise, all of the tanks on this new rack flow to a central sump. I decided to do a sump on this rack because it is composed primarily of a dozen 5.5 gallon tanks, which would really limit our filtration options. The sump greatly increases our options in this case AND small tanks are a real pain in the butt to get right, so this turns a dozen small tanks into one big tank in terms of cycling etc.
Details/pics etc. are at the link in my sig.