Canister filter

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Barca

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Jan 10, 2022
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Hi all.
I have a 4 feet tank. 4x2x1.5 (Length x width x height) and I bought the wrong canister filter. Will lowering water in tank have any effect on my canister filter ? Particularly the input tube that gets water back to the canister ?
My tank is 83 gallons (310 litres) and the filter I have is oase biomaster 250 that comes with a flow rate of 900 litres per hour, so that is only a overturn of 3 times and that is too little flow and filtration for a 83 gallon. If i only fill the tank to 50% or 60% will I still get 900 litres of filtration per hour ? confused with the suction strength of the input tube that sucks water back to the canister. Thanks guys.
 
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Hi all.
I have a 4 feet tank. 4x2x1.5 (Length x width x height) and I bought the wrong canister filter. Will lowering water in tank have any effect on my canister filter ? Particularly the input tube that gets water back to the canister ?
My tank is 83 gallons (310 litres) and the filter I have is oase biomaster 250 that comes with a flow rate of 900 litres per hour, so that is only a overturn of 3 times and that is too little flow and filtration for a 83 gallon. If i only fill the tank to 50% or 60% will I still get 900 litres of filtration per hour ? confused with the suction strength of the input tube that sucks water back to the canister. Thanks guys.

Welcome aboard
 
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Reactions: Barca and kno4te
I don't think reducing your water volume would solve the problem anyway. Keep your tank full and add a HOB . What is the stocking density, that is the primary driver
 
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Reactions: Barca and deeda
Good advice given.
Not only the canister performance can suffer if you lower the water level, but the benefit of about half of the total volume of the tank will not be operable, thus making it approximately a 40gal tank, with the inherent increase of possibilityy of fluctuations, and ability to remain stable.
In addition to increasing turnover rate and amount of mechanical and biological media, adding a second filter (best an HOB) will provide much needed redundance, which is of critical importance for safety and peace of mind. One filter fails or becomes temporarily, and the other will give your the needed backup.
I keep 2 filters in all my aquaria (beginning at 40gal), and 3 in 6 foot tanks. Peace of mind is priceless and relatively inexpensive.
 
I agree with the above comments about adding a HOB filter, instead of lowering water level.
I find the ratings of canisters highly over stated as a general rule (especially if you have substantial sized fish),
and would add a HOB whether it seemed under rated or not, in fact I'd probably add 2 HOBs .
 
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