River tank project
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2010 1:46 am
Hello everyone,
This is my first post here, so I will tell you a little about my situation first. Several months ago I saw three bizarre little fish (I now know they are some kind of hillstream loach) in a local pet store and decided to get them. I must have given them a great deal of relief since they were in a bare little display with very little water flow or algae. I put them in my largest tank at the time, a heavily planted 20 gallon long.
After some research I realized neither of my two tanks (the 20 and a 5.5 that I use to hatch corydoras) were suitable habitats, although the tank they were in had a year's worth of barely nibbled on algae, so they were at least well fed, because they were relatively still.
As a temporary fix i positioned a 150 gph filter so that the return was pretty turbulent and fell on several large quartz rocks. This annoyed some of the inhabitants, but the hillstreams liked it, because they immediately gathered under the flow and remain there or in several abandoned stiphodon caves nearby.
A couple days ago I found a great deal on a 44 gallon breeder tank (37x18x16) and purchased it with the intention of making a river tank very like the one concept one show here. http://www.loaches.com/articles/a-river-runs-through-it .
For the current I have two Maxi-Jet 1200s (295 gph each) and an an Eheim canister filter (116 gph) positioned so that the intakes are at one end and the returns at another.
Today I glued all the piping together and filled the tank to test it out. I am a little concerned because the current hits the return end of the tank and circles back a little more than I had expected it too.
Is this alright or should I try and make the flow more unidirectional? I have also thought it might be better if i positioned the plumbing so that i purposefully created a strong, circular current. Maybe even create some sort of divider in the middle.
This is my first attempt at any kind of river tank or keeping Hillstreams and I would appreciate any advice.
Thanks, Gabriel.
This is my first post here, so I will tell you a little about my situation first. Several months ago I saw three bizarre little fish (I now know they are some kind of hillstream loach) in a local pet store and decided to get them. I must have given them a great deal of relief since they were in a bare little display with very little water flow or algae. I put them in my largest tank at the time, a heavily planted 20 gallon long.
After some research I realized neither of my two tanks (the 20 and a 5.5 that I use to hatch corydoras) were suitable habitats, although the tank they were in had a year's worth of barely nibbled on algae, so they were at least well fed, because they were relatively still.
As a temporary fix i positioned a 150 gph filter so that the return was pretty turbulent and fell on several large quartz rocks. This annoyed some of the inhabitants, but the hillstreams liked it, because they immediately gathered under the flow and remain there or in several abandoned stiphodon caves nearby.
A couple days ago I found a great deal on a 44 gallon breeder tank (37x18x16) and purchased it with the intention of making a river tank very like the one concept one show here. http://www.loaches.com/articles/a-river-runs-through-it .
For the current I have two Maxi-Jet 1200s (295 gph each) and an an Eheim canister filter (116 gph) positioned so that the intakes are at one end and the returns at another.
Today I glued all the piping together and filled the tank to test it out. I am a little concerned because the current hits the return end of the tank and circles back a little more than I had expected it too.
Is this alright or should I try and make the flow more unidirectional? I have also thought it might be better if i positioned the plumbing so that i purposefully created a strong, circular current. Maybe even create some sort of divider in the middle.
This is my first attempt at any kind of river tank or keeping Hillstreams and I would appreciate any advice.
Thanks, Gabriel.