Hello,
I have seen these filter advertised in a magazine recently and wondered if anyone had got one?
I have seen these filter advertised in a magazine recently and wondered if anyone had got one?
fishman256;3413318; said:Hello,
I have seen these filter advertised in a magazine recently and wondered if anyone had got one?
Jgray152;3416431; said:I Looked at those at the LFS and the cartridges fit pretty close to each other. Didn't seem to mater if the top was open or not, the water being filtered really only had one path to flow.
I doubt hagen would make an underwater filter that would not be able to be completely submerged.
Little Video on it
http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/pfk/pages/show_article.php?article_id=713
JakeH;3417039; said:I dont think he's calling you a liar or anything... It's just not very common to hear such a bad review of a Fluval product. Especially since you're saying the design is flawed, not just low-quality or noisy or some other normal complaint. Those kinds of complaints are easier to swallow when Fluval is known for their design/R&D work.
I know there is a cavity but what I am trying to say is that I don't believe water is being forced through the mechanical media so the water that is being sucked through it starts on the side and flows through the mechanical media and into the bio media and then pushed through the output. The tops of the cartridges don't have a large void between them so the very little tiny bit of water that would bypass is not enough to say this filter does not work.nope you're wrong, the water can completely bypass the mechanical cartridge if you submerge it fully... the entire top inside under the lid is a cavity.#
but hey.,.. when you buy one and find that out feel free to remember me.
The water can flow over all the cartridges but this does not mean in any way that, that specific water is bypassing the media.when the filter is fully submerged water can flow straight over the top of the outside two cartridges.
it may be hard to believe, but it is true.