Is it possible to have too much filtration and flow rate?

Voltron

New Member
I have a 125g tank, I'm going to get a fluval. The fx6 looks awesome, its rated at 563gph for the flow rate. Is that too much? My tank will have little live rock and the fish load will be somewhat lite to moderate. Most fish will be "active swimming" for length of tank.
 

jay0705

Well-Known Member
Yea your header is a bit misleading. Too much filtration no, but yes u can have too much flow
 

Voltron

New Member
Sorry about the misleading headline. So I take it the 563gph flow is not too much for 125g. Thanks
 

mauler

Active Member
3000 seems kind of low for a 125 I have a 135 and I'm getting around 10000gph from all my powerheads my fish love swimming in the current.
 

jay0705

Well-Known Member
Most people say aslong as the fish dont get blown around the tank yout good. Lol I go a bit less tho
 

deejeff0442

Active Member
Also check the head flow rates.meaning the machine might put out 600 gph at the outlet but 400gph after 6 foot of piping to the tank.
 

Cali_G

New Member
As others have pointed out, your question is a bit misleading. "Flow rate" and "filtration rate" are not necessarily synonymous. "Flow rate" usually refers to how much water movement is occurring inside the tank. "Filtration rate" refers to how often the filter is turning over the total tank volume, i.e. how many gallons are passing through the filter per hour.

Filtration of 563gph for a 125 gallon tank might not be enough filtration in the long run as waste loads will increase. You should always set up a tank for its future needs, not for what you are planning on stocking with today. More filtration is always better as you cannot have too much filtration. However, if you don't have a high enough flow rate to move the water and keep detritus suspended, allowing the filter to remove it, no amount of filtration will be enough. I usually shoot for a filtration rate of at least 10x the tank volume and adjust up if I plan to stock with high waste producers (Lion Fish, Puffers, Groupers, etc).
The flow rate should be based on tank inhabitants as well as tank dimensions. A tank that is 72” long will need stronger and/or more powerheads than a tank that is 60” long. Start off slow and work up until you feel you have enough flow. Try powerheads with about a 1200 gph flow…one on each side wall facing each other and position so you get a circular type flow. The 1200 gph is just an arbitrary number. Your tank will actually tell you what it needs based on how well you take care of it and what your maintenance practices will be.

Just remember it’s not an exact science. What works for one person does not necessarily work for another. Regardless of what works, enjoy and have fun!
 

snakeblitz33

Well-Known Member
Fluval mainly sells canister filters. Canister filters are notorious for getting clogged and being a constant source of nutrients if not well maintained. A sump would be better, or just perhaps a couple of Emperor 400s and a decent hang on back skimmer like an Eshopps rated for your size tank.

Your filtration gph is separate from your flow gph. Filtration averages 7x to 10x your aquariums volume and your internal flow rate should be between 10x and 25x your aquariums volume for a fish only tank.

The two hang on back filters and the hang on back eshopps skimmer that can be added on later will get you to that total turnover, with the addition of a couple of Koralia powerheads at 750gph each would be sufficient to keep your tank healthy - as long as proper water changes are maintained and detritus is managed well.
 
I have a 120g tank, two power heads, both about 1600gph, one on the top of left hand side pointed inside to the center of the tank, the other on the other side about 10 inches down and pointed to the outside of tank, Am I doing it right?
 

mauler

Active Member
Take a stick with a piece of string tied to it and move it around the tank to find out if you have any dead spots
 

mauler

Active Member
I run a jebao wp40(3400gph) and a wp60(5300gph) and 2 cheap 1300gph powerheads which makes 11400 but I dial the wp60 back a little so I'm probably somewhere around 10000.
 

mauler

Active Member
I don't think so it keeps detritus from settling onmy rocks and sand bed so it can be sucked up by my filter and skimmer. My fish don't seem to mind it but I also turn turn the wp60 off at night and dial the wp40 down so at night I'm only at like 3000 maybe. If I kept it at 10000 24/7 that would be overkill.
 
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