I have problems with too much food getting onto the black sponge covers in my HOB overflow.
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Do you turn off your filters and powerheads during feeding?
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Do you turn off your filters and powerheads during feeding?
19Yes I turn my cannisters off0.00%0No I don't turn my cannister off36.84%7Yes I turn my wet / dry off15.79%3No I don't turn my wet / dry off0.00%0Yes I turn wet / dry and cannister off5.26%1No I don't turn my wet / dry and cannister off42.11%8Jarrod - Houston, Texas
150 gallon - my African cichlid monster tank (I know it isn't a big as yours)
17 gallon - Threadfin rainbows and corys lightly planted
5 gallon - planted red cherry shrimp breeder
3 gallon - planted red cherry shrimp breederTags: None
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I use food that sinks. It used to drive me crazy when the food when straight into the overflow.Our Fishhouse
Sleep: A completely inadequate substitute for caffeine.
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Originally posted by FrontosaurusRex View PostIf you have to turn off filters just to feed your fish...you need new filters. I used to you HOB filters until I started having this problem. I switched to canisters and never looked back. Just my opinion though.Our Fishhouse
Sleep: A completely inadequate substitute for caffeine.
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I don't turn off my HOB filters on my freshwater tanks, but I do turn off my Wet/Dry filter on my Saltwater. There's too much flow in that tank and the food is immediately sucked into the filter system before the fish even have a chance to eat any of it.55g - Blood Parrot, Cichlid, Silver Dollar, Flying Fox
29g - Mixed Tetra
29g - Mixed Freshwater
20g - Planted guppy
2.5g - Betta
14g Biocube Reef
Future 20g Long - Figure 8 Puffer
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The problem may be that I am pushing a ton of water through that overflow. I use a sinking food but occassionally the pellets don't sink right away. I also mix in some veggie flakes with spirulina which gets sucked into the overflow quickly.Jarrod - Houston, Texas
150 gallon - my African cichlid monster tank (I know it isn't a big as yours)
17 gallon - Threadfin rainbows and corys lightly planted
5 gallon - planted red cherry shrimp breeder
3 gallon - planted red cherry shrimp breeder
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Originally posted by myjohnson View PostIf feeding flakes you might want to release the flakes under water.
I push a lot of water also and I don't have this problem with the above mention practice.Jarrod - Houston, Texas
150 gallon - my African cichlid monster tank (I know it isn't a big as yours)
17 gallon - Threadfin rainbows and corys lightly planted
5 gallon - planted red cherry shrimp breeder
3 gallon - planted red cherry shrimp breeder
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In your situation turning the filter(s) off for five minutes while you feed may be the easiest solution, provided restarting them isn't a giant pain. It won't hurt your filters to do so, but if your canister(s)' a little dirty it will sometimes puff out a cloud of mulm on restart.
MarkWhat are the facts? Again and again and again--what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore devine revelation, forget what "the stars foretell", avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable "verdict of history"--what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your only clue.
Robert Anson Heinlein
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Originally posted by jarrodaden View PostI have had mixed success with this. Not all food will readily sink even if you dunk it.
I feed NLS. I position my auto-feeder to dump food out right in front of my return line and all the food is pushed down before it goes into the overflow.I ate my fish that died.
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