How much filtration do you need on a given tank with X stock Y water parameters and Z feeding rate?
If we can't give a definitive answer to these basic questions how can we say that a tank needs more bio filtration?
We know if a tank has enough bio filtration when the ammonia and nitrite are at 0. If you want to be really sure take an ammonia reading after a big feeding. 0 ammonia after feeding = plenty of bio filtration.
If you are filtering a large heavily stocked tank, you will run into circulation (flow rate) issues long before you run into media capacity issues. Insufficient flow will leave dead spots, the tank's volume of water won't be turned over quickly enough to process newly produced waste. You are better off adding more flow and/or another separate filter, than you are adding more media capacity.
One of the recurring issues we keep hearing about with FX5s is essentially choking the filter with fine polishing pads. Firstly, fine polishing pads and fine pore foam aren't necessary for crystal clear water. Second, if the pad is getting clogged and slowing the flow in your filter it's doing its job. Third, the same pad will get clogged in any other filter just as fast in relation to surface area and flow rate, unless the filter allows for a lot of bypass, which the FX5 apparently doesn't.
An FX5 has more filtering capacity than a reasonably sized sensibly stocked tank will need. You will have insufficient flow before you have insufficient media. The only reason to increase an FX5's bio media capacity is if you want to use it to process sewerage.
If we can't give a definitive answer to these basic questions how can we say that a tank needs more bio filtration?
We know if a tank has enough bio filtration when the ammonia and nitrite are at 0. If you want to be really sure take an ammonia reading after a big feeding. 0 ammonia after feeding = plenty of bio filtration.
If you are filtering a large heavily stocked tank, you will run into circulation (flow rate) issues long before you run into media capacity issues. Insufficient flow will leave dead spots, the tank's volume of water won't be turned over quickly enough to process newly produced waste. You are better off adding more flow and/or another separate filter, than you are adding more media capacity.
One of the recurring issues we keep hearing about with FX5s is essentially choking the filter with fine polishing pads. Firstly, fine polishing pads and fine pore foam aren't necessary for crystal clear water. Second, if the pad is getting clogged and slowing the flow in your filter it's doing its job. Third, the same pad will get clogged in any other filter just as fast in relation to surface area and flow rate, unless the filter allows for a lot of bypass, which the FX5 apparently doesn't.
An FX5 has more filtering capacity than a reasonably sized sensibly stocked tank will need. You will have insufficient flow before you have insufficient media. The only reason to increase an FX5's bio media capacity is if you want to use it to process sewerage.
