Two words: sponge filters. They compliment my fx5 quite nicely, and do pretty much everything mentioned above with the powerhead comments plus have the added benefit of being massive bio filters.
soulpatch;4599225; said:A lot of people have had the stealth heater explode for seemingly no reason. Some have exploded violently enough to shatter the glass of the aquarium so many people (myself included) steer clear of them now.
As for the air with leds. It works like you think it does... The air comes into the unit right above the led. When you plug in the LED it lights up the water and bubbles above it. Just note you will need both the airline and power line running to it so it will add one more wire on the back of your tank that is not needed.
I also disagree with your assessment to need only one filter. Sure the FX5 can handle that much water according to the chart but then you have the outlet and inlet in one area of the tank. Regardless if you have powerheads or not you will have a deadspot on the other side of your tank IMHO where your parameters could spike. If you only want to use the one FX5 then I would plumb it in to have two inputs (one on each side of the tank) and a return in the center that is split to push water/debris to each inlet. The powerheads I would then use to hit any deadspots where debris is sitting...
If I were to put two filters on this tank, which is better, the 404 or the xp4? I've read a lot but I'm just kind of in limbo. Also, what would be the best positioning for intake/output for both filters in the tank?
So, no stealth heaters, not risking that with this baby. What heater should I go with then? I'm not a fan of glass heaters, I've had them explode in my tanks from my fish banging them and it's not pretty, at all.
Sorry for all the questions, this is one of my dream tanks and I want to get it right the first time, considering all I've had to filter until now are 55gal tanks.