When you have a sump and you do your weekly water change it is very easy to remove and rinse, or completely change your mechanical filtration. This is the ideal way because if you don't it is the build up of crud on your mechanical filtration which not only begins to hamper flow, but increases nitrate production too, and I suspect all us sump guys do the same, it's just a common and sensible approach.
Saying that, if that cleaning regime works brilliantly for us sump guys, then the same principles should apply to cannisters too shouldn't they? every week cleaning.
But it often doesn't because we hear what a pita they can be to clean, and so maintenance gets put off and the duration between cleaning becomes longer and longer. And all the time the filter gets dirtier and dirtier and adds to the "soup" in the display tank.
If I ran cannisters, which I never will, I'd do them weekly, and just get on with it, until such a time I was so fed up with them, that I'd start running a sump.
Saying that, if that cleaning regime works brilliantly for us sump guys, then the same principles should apply to cannisters too shouldn't they? every week cleaning.
But it often doesn't because we hear what a pita they can be to clean, and so maintenance gets put off and the duration between cleaning becomes longer and longer. And all the time the filter gets dirtier and dirtier and adds to the "soup" in the display tank.
If I ran cannisters, which I never will, I'd do them weekly, and just get on with it, until such a time I was so fed up with them, that I'd start running a sump.