300 gallon planted fancy goldfish community (about 7 big fancy goldfish, live plants, and a ton of community fish such as scissortail rasboras, platies, rosy barbs, checkerboard barbs, Siamese algae eaters, bristlenose plecoes, etc.). If it didn't come with built-in overflows, I would have just used a Fluval FX6 or two and been done. But, Marineland makes their deep dimension tanks with overflows and it costs more to have the same tank customized without them. So, I'm stuck with a sump. The main section of the sump has tumbling K2 media which is working great for maintenance-free biological filtration.
Originally, the sump had a foam block at the bottom of the first section, but it clogged up very quickly and would just overflow. Recently, I tried a DIY tray system with drawers full of pads. It worked, but still clogged up too quickly. If I just use the black foam pads, it will go a week without clogging but the water wasn't as clear. I tried quilt batting and a dual density filter pad, both of which clogged up in about a day or so. I finally tried a 100 micron filter sock. I set it up last night and 12 hours later the tank is the clearest it's ever been. However, I haven't fed anything in those 12 hours and it is already clogged and overflowing.
The system used to have a pond bead fiilter on it (AquaUV Ultima II 1,000), but I never got anything out of the backwashing so it wasn't helping (yet it would pump out sewage when I kicked it back on to filter). I finally pulled it off entirely and the inside was horrendous. It was full of junk. So it seems it was trapping stuff, it just wasn't coming out when I backwashed which is the whole point of using that filter. I pulled it off around the time I tried the DIY trickle tray setup (I can't remember if I pulled the bead filter at the same time or a week or two after starting the trickle tray). The pump is a Rio 32 hyper flo (2,110gph/1,500gph at 4').
I am at a loss. I have never in my career in this hobby had issues keeping a tank clear. I highly prefer canisters, but I know a lot of people like and use sumps with great success, especially on such a large system. What am I doing wrong? The way I see it, I have the following options:
1 - Try setting up two filter socks that are at least 200 micron so they don't clog as quickly, one for each drain, maybe also have a 'pre-filter' mesh bag filter sock ahead of each one (inside, but the water goes through the mesh first to catch really big stuff).
2 - Experiment with a ton of different filter pads to get some sort of progression with the DIY trickle trays to get a combination that keeps it clear and lasts a week between cleanings.
3 - Buy an Ocean Clear filter to run the return line through like I did with the pond filter.
4 - Try the pond filter again, maybe with a different pump. As far as I can tell, this pump is strong enough, but it's just not working like it should. This would be my top choice so that I don't have to haul the filtration to the sink and clean it, instead I could just backwash it.
5 - Give up and just buy a Fluval FX6. I would get the filtration I am used to, but I would have to pay a lot for the filter and have the hassle of hauling it to the sink to clean.
Originally, the sump had a foam block at the bottom of the first section, but it clogged up very quickly and would just overflow. Recently, I tried a DIY tray system with drawers full of pads. It worked, but still clogged up too quickly. If I just use the black foam pads, it will go a week without clogging but the water wasn't as clear. I tried quilt batting and a dual density filter pad, both of which clogged up in about a day or so. I finally tried a 100 micron filter sock. I set it up last night and 12 hours later the tank is the clearest it's ever been. However, I haven't fed anything in those 12 hours and it is already clogged and overflowing.
The system used to have a pond bead fiilter on it (AquaUV Ultima II 1,000), but I never got anything out of the backwashing so it wasn't helping (yet it would pump out sewage when I kicked it back on to filter). I finally pulled it off entirely and the inside was horrendous. It was full of junk. So it seems it was trapping stuff, it just wasn't coming out when I backwashed which is the whole point of using that filter. I pulled it off around the time I tried the DIY trickle tray setup (I can't remember if I pulled the bead filter at the same time or a week or two after starting the trickle tray). The pump is a Rio 32 hyper flo (2,110gph/1,500gph at 4').
I am at a loss. I have never in my career in this hobby had issues keeping a tank clear. I highly prefer canisters, but I know a lot of people like and use sumps with great success, especially on such a large system. What am I doing wrong? The way I see it, I have the following options:
1 - Try setting up two filter socks that are at least 200 micron so they don't clog as quickly, one for each drain, maybe also have a 'pre-filter' mesh bag filter sock ahead of each one (inside, but the water goes through the mesh first to catch really big stuff).
2 - Experiment with a ton of different filter pads to get some sort of progression with the DIY trickle trays to get a combination that keeps it clear and lasts a week between cleanings.
3 - Buy an Ocean Clear filter to run the return line through like I did with the pond filter.
4 - Try the pond filter again, maybe with a different pump. As far as I can tell, this pump is strong enough, but it's just not working like it should. This would be my top choice so that I don't have to haul the filtration to the sink and clean it, instead I could just backwash it.
5 - Give up and just buy a Fluval FX6. I would get the filtration I am used to, but I would have to pay a lot for the filter and have the hassle of hauling it to the sink to clean.


