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I have a 10 Gallon Fish Tank right now , with 3 baby chiclids (2 Convict , 1 Red Devil)

Don't worry i know they need more space , but right now they are still young and have alot of room to swim.

My filter system right now is old , and i have a brand new 20-40 Gallon AquaTech Filter System that i didn't even know i had until like 2 hours ago.

Is it dangerous for my fish to use a 20-40 Filter System in a 10 Gallon Tank?

Will it unbalance the healthy bacteria and keep the tank too clean?

2007-05-30 18:17:21 · 8 answers · asked by O Kongeriket 2 in Pets Fish

8 answers

Using a higher powered filter does not harm the fish, it just means the tank will be filtered more effectively than a normal 10 gallon filter system. Now not saying that everyone should upgrade their 10 gallon filters for higher powers. You should only use a higher power filter if you have a slightly overstocked tank with no where else to seperate your stock, have mostly live plants in your tank, or you have a certain species of fish that even though purchased small, will grow up larger if taken care of properly. The waste generated from dead plant material, fish waste and dead good bateria usually builds up over time, and with a filter that commendates the same size tank generally will take a slow process to remove some of the waste. If using a slightly higher filter, the waste reduction is doubled. This would be no different than using a canister filter system for a small tank. A 20 gal. filter for a 10 gallon is alright, but not for anything lower than 10 gallon tank as the suction and release current will be too fast for most fish to cope with. And when in doubt, don't be afriad to research up fish specialists and senior hobbyists about filtrations systems, such as speciality petstores and public aquariums.

2007-05-30 18:32:24 · answer #1 · answered by crystal_orca19 1 · 1 0

It may provide more water flow than your fish actually need, but you can solve this by adjusting the amount of flow.

If the 10 gallon is an established tank, most of the bacteria will be in the substrate. If it's new or still in the process of cycling, you might want to keep the old filter (or at least the media) in the tank until the new filter has a chance to establish some bacteria of its own.

2007-05-30 18:31:52 · answer #2 · answered by copperhead 7 · 0 0

Should be fine. Use the filter media from the old filter and put that into the new filter for the bacteria issue. Or, if there's room, just run both filters until the newer one gets the bacteria established in it.

2007-05-30 18:24:19 · answer #3 · answered by tikitiki 7 · 2 0

relatively, my first suggestion could be to get a minimum of a 20 gallon tank in case you are able to locate the money for it. a ten gallon tank is relatively limiting in terms of what fish you are able to keep in it, and that's extra tricky to maintain than a bigger tank by using fact the water high quality can substitute swifter. a large type of the fish you spot in puppy shops are too vast to maintain in a ten gallon tank in case you purchase them interior the stated numbers for appropriate college length. do no longer question me why, yet many puppy shops do no longer carry aquariums bigger than fifty 5 gallons, yet they sell fish that would require a bigger aquarium than that. exceedingly much each keep i've got seen incorporates oscars which want a minimum of seventy 5 gallons. besides, in case you have your coronary heart set on a ten gallon tank, pay interest to catx, exceptionally her article approximately stocking a ten gallon tank. She knows what she's speaking approximately. specially, do no longer even think of roughly putting goldfish in a tank that small. those "lovable little goldfish" you spot in shops would be a foot long as adults and want 20 gallons of water in step with fish.

2016-11-23 20:37:20 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No, it's fine go ahead and use it. they will love the extra circulation of water. It's really hard to keep a tank too clean!

2007-05-30 18:42:22 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

No, it will be fine I have an aquaclear 70 in my 30 gallon for a year and no issues!

2007-05-30 18:21:21 · answer #6 · answered by jra60411 3 · 1 1

it should be fine

2007-05-30 21:38:35 · answer #7 · answered by Mel 2 · 0 0

yes, it is, it is about logic man, everything in its right place

2007-05-30 18:22:10 · answer #8 · answered by marsellesa 2 · 0 3

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