Sponge Filters are The Worst Aquarium Filter
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- čas přidán 16. 09. 2021
- Hello Fellow Fish Keepers!
In this video we share why sponge filters might not be the best choice for your aquarium.
Want to learn more about sponge filters? Check out these videos!
Beginners Guide to Sponge Filters: • Fish Tank Sponge Filte...
The Science Behind Why Cleaning Sponge Filters in Tap Water is OK: • Aquarium Science Serie...
Sponge Filter vs HOB Filter: • Fish Tank Filter Showd...
Sponge FIlter vs Matten Filter: • Aquarium Science Serie...
Should You Use a Powerhead on Your Sponge Filter: • Should You Add a Power...
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Want to learn more about sponge filters? Check out these videos!
Beginners Guide to Sponge Filters: czcams.com/video/yQSI-3rUsIs/video.html
The Science Behind Why Cleaning Sponge Filters in Tap Water is OK: czcams.com/video/kN5F8q7aFGg/video.html
Sponge Filter vs HOB Filter: czcams.com/video/TN_eagzIEyY/video.html
Sponge FIlter vs Matten Filter: czcams.com/video/kN5F8q7aFGg/video.html
Should You Use a Powerhead on Your Sponge Filter: czcams.com/video/1H1PDbCVaR4/video.html
Our new shirts can be found at: www.primetimeaquatics.com/merch
For the latest in the fish room check us out on Instagram primetime_aquatics
For more cool behind the scenes stuff consider becoming a member!
czcams.com/channels/YVN7EN0ALL6CE4U7NpMUTA.htmljoin
If you want to see all the cool stuff Joanna does with other types of scapes check out her channel!
czcams.com/channels/PEZk1MpOTGiBVh6BtWjlRg.html
I hate them so much I have dozens to sneer.
i have 6 Aqua-top 250's in my 300 gallon rubbermaid stock tank, each one is rated for a 250 gallon tank, they're ran by a Vivosun air pump that's good for 1250 gallons an hour, i clean my sponge filters once every 3 months, i have never had any issues with reduced performance of my sponge filters over time, my water stays crystal clear all the time, I think the key factor with BIG sponge filters is having a powerful air pump
Watching this as I stare at my aquariums with sponge filters
Lol same scenarios
Same 2
Lmao,
Watching this before I proceed with order
Just an opinion. Try everything.
Um, yeah me too!
All my sumps and HOBs have been converted to sponges with some pot scrubbies. I have been in the hobby 60 years and my tanks range from 45 - 500 gallons. Now that I use essentially only sponges, my tanks have never been healthier and easier to maintain. Moral of the story? Let's think about sponge filters more broadly than just the bubbling corner filter.
Man I'm confused i have a 200 gallon tank , should i buy an air pump and few sponge filters or a build myself a diy filter using water pump ,
What kind of sponges do you use can you post a link
@@samanthamorris2207 do a Google search for Swiss tropicals in the US. THE FOAM IS CALLED poret
All up to you.
Personally I want to use a matten filter (Hamburg matten filter) in my first aquarium. Idk if I will. Depends what I can find out there for used aquariums that may come with a hob.
The hob I would plan to "hot rod" it.
@@ryuu6958one undergravel instead of few sponges
I use sponge filters in all my tanks, breeding tanks especially. I find that if you clean them regularly they are a great choice and I would not use HOBs. They are also amazing for smaller tanks in which many other types of filtration take up too much space or just wouldn’t work. I think they are great for low maintenance aquariums because of their small size and how inexpensive they are compared to HOBs. Great video though, the multifasciatus tank is looking amazing!
Great point made, wholeheartedly agree
Thank you!! I also think a better pump would be a good idea to get better suction.
One great advantage of the sponge filter, for the fishkeeper with multiple tanks, is that you can keep spare sponges going in other mature tanks so you always have cycled filters ready to go when you (inevitably) add another tank or ten. I also like how I can run multiple filters from one pump. This means I'm only using one power outlet and I'm always struggling for outlets anyway. Another advantage of this is that keeping one spare air pump is the same as keeping many spare filters, in terms of the moving, breakable parts.
Well, there you go planning ahead, and thinking of efficient redundancies.
Yes, great for impulse fish purchases.
That’s why I have one. I can just pull it out and have a quarantine tank setup in about 5 minutes
This is what we do. I alwayw have bioballs behind my HOB cartridges and always have extra sponges. I'm never waiting 6 weeks to cycle a tank again.
Them's fightin words! I love sponge filters and run them in all my tanks in addition to HOBs in the larger ones. I don't count on them for filtration as much as for aeration. I think every tank needs air, and running that air through a sponge filter gives me bonus bio filtration. They're also great to have around for quarantine, hospital, or new tanks to jump start the cycle.
I have the same setup in my 40 breeder. Aquaclear 50 and a medium sponge for extra filtration, movement, and my only source of air.
I'm sure your setups are great :-)
I don't run air on any of my tanks, the 90, the 125 or the 300 gallon. The plants and running the water through the sump system more than provides enough air in the tanks. It's just a matter of different strokes for different folks. I would agree though that they are great for quarantine and hospital tanks.
Same here. I run sponge filters as an addition to my HOB filters on all my tanks for air. Then when I need to set up a hospital or quarantine tank, I can pull one out and I’m off and running.
@@brendalemay8384 same
Ive been doing this professionally for abour 12 years now, i would VERY MUCH prefer maintaining sponges vs sumps and HOBs.
Why is it better (or easier) to maintain a sponge filter over a HOB?
@@mayerkatz2836 cost. U pay every time u replace filters
@@unnie7834 I don't replace them, I modified them with sponges and bio media, so I basically have the same as a Sponge Filter (and even more) just outside the tank
Not if you use the tidal HOB.
I respect your knowledgeable opinion, but I must say. After I modified mine with a Air stone, and using it in a much smaller tank.. The thing is absolutely godsent. But I don’t think I’d use one in a larger tank.
I think these sponge filters have a special place in our realm, for sure.
I used two on opposite ends in a 75 with two large tiger oscars and an even larger pleco. Bare tank with a middle piece of drift. All sides panted black expect the front. They didnt stand out as bad in a dark tank designed to look like it was in deep water. I also did the air stone trick with mine. Those Oscars can be monster sized and intelligent for a fish.
I use the relatively clear old water at water changes to rinse my sponge in the bucket. A few minutes of squeezes and most debris is out. Of course with 80 tanks you probably aren't using buckets for water changes. I drill out the center so I can pass the air hose into the tube and place an air stone at the bottom to make it quieter. I hide mine behind a planting and learn to ignore it. Good video again.
I use double, super fine sponge filters in my breeding tanks and i can go for a couple of months between cleans which isn't bad. They start spluttering when clogged and I squeeze them out during the next water change. The super fine ones keep the water really polished and crystal clear. All are powered by a single blower type pump. This set up is super quiet and economical. I've tried a few different hang on backs and just never really liked them tbh. Whatever works for you I suppose : )
I keep sponges in my tanks even the one that has a canister because if something happens with that canister I always want there to be a backup on the ready
Also, good if you need to move the sponge to a quarentine tank to cycle it quickly.
Exactly
I really loved the presentation of this one, your videos keep improving in overall quality and always provide me new info and ideas. Thank you guys for all your efforts.
Thank you!
Another great video. This one in particular had great editing that really helped tell the story. Thanks!!
I am so appreciative of this video! I've been using HOB on my three small tanks (5, 10, 20), but I've been seeing so many people like yourselves use sponge filters. This provided some really valuable context for me! Cheers!
New to hobby, but I recently got a sponge filter ... it's got 2 smaller sponges and you can pull them right off the top, so easier to clean than the type you show in the video. I have a HOB as well, leaving it on until the sponge has had time to get up and going. Pretty full tank (fish and snails) and debating if I should keep both now ...
Really appreciate your quality well thought through videos
⬅️⬅️⬅️ nervously clicks as I just got a sponge filter in the mail yesterday.
It will work just ifne :-)
You’ll like it! I use a HOB and Sponge on all my tanks. I like them both.
@@PrimeTimeAquatics I have a hob, and a sponge filter with 2 sponges. This one suctions to the glass and I really like it so far
Me too
I just got 2 sponge filters today. Ugggg.
I have come to enjoy your sense of humor more and more over time. I use sponge filters, HOB sometimes, and cannister filters. The fact I can easily run three small tanks on one air pump (Eheim is pretty quiet btw) is important when you consider energy costs. The cost of a sponge filter is lower than other filters so they lose on that front as well :).
Appreciate you being here!
Nope. Sponge filters ruined my first ever experience with keeping tropical fish.
Jason you are right. I am big believer of canister filter and using one for more than 10 years. But recently I start buying a sponge filters as back up and main filter for smaller Betta tank. They are so versatile that no body beat it.
I have a HOB and Sponge in every tank. This way if one fails, or needs replaced, I'm not losing my cycle.
ABSOLUTELY LOVED this video 📹 😄😄😄🥰🥰🥰 Thanks so much Jason😊
Nicely played Sir 😉 I love sponge filters. I would need a little more for an Oscar but for general fish and especially breeding and nano fish they really are the best
GREAT JOB...LOVE THE RECAP..TURNING IT INTO A "YEA..WE KINDA NEED EM" 👍🏽👍🏽
Great video. And a good pro & con discussion.
Personally I don't have a preference. Sponge filters, HOB, and canisters all provide the same filtration at different speeds and scales. So, it's user preference. Your will get aerobic nitrification and basic mechanical filtration from all 3 options.
I personally favor more complex filtration methods, that are more expensive, harder to scale, and require effort to set up.
But with only one system; it's a one-time purchase, I only set it up once, and I have options for automation, testing and monitor probes, media reactors, anoxic zones, refuge zones for invertebrates or specialty organisms, and I keep not only my filter but also my heater out of the display... What do I prefer: A Sump.
Great video 😆 for me, sponge filters (that you got me into) are the best, I have lots of inverts that love hanging out on them eating all the little bits, and they're completely internal with air stones so they're quiet in the house, I use the coarse ones from Aquarium Co-op and they are great, they are weighted so they don't float and they haven't clogged yet, I used to use internal submerged filters and I had a filter failure one day that we think had happened days earlier, thankfully all of my fishies and inverts were ok but now I really like being able to look across the room and see that my filters are running. I'm about to set up more tanks and I'm definitely sold on sponge filters 🙂
I still prefer them to HOB filters, especially in tanks with fry/shrimp.
They're also really not that hard to maintain, just pull them up by the air hose, disconnect hose, rinse in sink, reattach hose and drop back down (2 minute job)
I agree! I have shrimp and don’t like the HOB filters. Saying they’re the worst filters to use is a bit dramatic 🤣 I have no issues with mine and you can hide it well with your plants and wood!
won't rinsing in sink kill off the bacteria??
@@craftwanderer8802we swish/squish ours in water change water.
Thank you! I’ll keep watching
I'm a newbie here and this is one of my favorite sponge filter videos 😂😂😂
Thanks for your advice 👍🏼
Maybe I'm just different but I've never had an issue with seeing a filter in the Aquarium. I made my own filters from pvc that work ok and I'm currently working on another filter that will hopefully work better
Love the spin at the end!
I’ve always hated sponge filters. Pain is A to clean etc. but I really love the Heiger double sponge filter with the media in bottom. Very slick and easy to clean. I use them only tanks with HOBs that floss my water clean. Just using HOB for bacteria.
Great video! Funny yet informative!
Thank you :-)
Am I crazy?! This was a satirical review right? Hence the flashbacks at the end where jason points out that they’re literally the best. Idk. I have course sponges in most of my tanks and seriously considering changing over to finer sponges because like Jason said, they don’t hold the funk in when you try to take them out and clean them.
They represent the duality of man. Haha - sometimes good and sometimes bad!
I use both a hob and a sponge filter. The hob does a great job of cleaning the water and the sponge helps me know the bacteria population will be maintained. The sponge doesn't need to be very big this way, and I have an immediate filter for a good quarantine tank when needed. This is an idea I got from Irene at Girl Talks Fish.
@@High_Octane I just changed out the hob on my 20 gal. from a cartridge filter to an Aquaclear. I'm impressed at how quiet it is, and I like the flow adjustment. I am a little intimidated on how to maintain it though. I put in very coarse filter material first, then less coarse, then a thin sheet of fine, and a small pack of bio-rings. What do you think? How often do you clean and/or replace the materials?
@@High_Octane Thanks so much for the information. I have an aquaclear for my 55 gal. I'll get set up today. Following your advice I made a coarse filter for the intake on my small aquarium . I have some tiny rasboras in there, having that intake filter will also help keep them safe.
Very well said: they're the worst and the best.....lol. IMO, they only belong in fish rooms and quarantine tanks. Always love the content!
I love the concept of this video 😁
I got 2 Aquaclear 70 HOB filters on my 55 gallon tank, I also have 1 up to 60 gallon sponge filter, do I even need the sponge filter with the 2 Aquaclears?
Thanks for the information about that type of filter
great vid. they are a must for me, i go away for 3 weeks at a time, i clean them before leaving etc. they are good for several months before getting clogged, so that covers me when i am away. HOB may or may not clog up, and if they do, they may leak if not properly set on an angle. thanks.
Praise the lord!!!! Somebody finally said it!!! I have NEVER liked sponge filters. EVER. I keep one in my 125 just to have it in case I need BB for a hospital/quarantine tank, but it isn't worth a crap for cleaning! THANK YOU!!!!!!
I feel like the negatives you brought up are pretty subjective, I noticed most of the points are regarding the higher degree maintenance than other filters, but many people including myself really don’t mind having to do all that. I have carpet in my room and can’t necessarily just pull filter floss out of my HOBs without getting fish doodies all over the place, I usually have to rip the entire filter off the back and take that into the bathroom. I feel like a good point to have made at the end along with having a proper set up would be theres a smaller margin for error when you start to get lazy lol (which happens to the best of us)
For me, my absolute biggest plus with sponge filters is that they can’t possibly cause a leak. Ive had leaks from an Aquaclear and a Fluval 207. Stinky bedroom for quite some time.
and made the title like click bait...really disappointed in this video
Jason Lin Thats just how the algorithm works and the way the game is played when you’re a youtuber. Honestly no big deal.
@@linjasonlin Don't really see how it's clickbait. He brought up a lot of positives and negatives and made the conclusion they are technically the worst kind of filter but there are still reasons to use them. What do you expect?
@@bullythebooks It's clickbait because he knows it's not true. Anyone with any real experience knows its not true. It's a manipulative, intentionally inflamatory statement. He even admits that he couldn't have his fishroom or youtube channel without them. He made this video because he KNEW that people would disagree with what was so very clearly not true, and that would provoke people to click on the video. He didn't make this video because he actually believes what he is saying. In this instance, he is not trying to convey truthful information. He is trying to get clicks, and hey, it worked on me, but at the cost of his credibility, to anyone paying attention anyway.
I like your counterpoint coming in the form of a flashback. New sub here.
Thank you for being here!
I have a very expensive sump system for my 150 gallon tank. In operation mode it runs 55 gallons and holds 75 gallons total. I still run 2 large sponge filters in the tank. These are there for if/when the power goes out and I need to keep filtration going with the small battery operated (USB) air pumps. They will have the beneficial bacteria already built up and should help keep the tank going. Do I need them during normal operation, nope. But they are back up plus they provide the surface breaking needed to help the air circulate into the water allowing gas exchanges.
I agree with you. I have a regular filter but I use it when I’m changing my water to keep some oxygen in the plastic container. Also this guy talks about pet who don’t clean the sponge for a long time.
The best fish keeping video ever - love the way you give the manufacturers a run for their money - you are right! It is the most ugliest thing in a tank. Looks like a floor mop or enema device. Cant understand that they can't design a more modern version. Lots of people are going to hate you for this - but I AM SUBSCRIBING!
Appreciate you being here!
I only use a sponge filter for the opposite end of whatever current is up. It works mainly to break up and supply another current where the water doesn't cycle easily, corners, behind rock shelves and such. They're a good buffer for tank health. It will cumulatively benefit the ecosystem when there is no dead zones in your tank besides intended cover. Prevent the build up of particles by drawing them to one spot.
I and my houseplants don't mind the cleaning aspect of the sponge filter. All of the "gunk" makes my plants happy and grow nicely ❤️
I knew there had to be a catch to this! Good take!!!
Have a sponge filter in every tank even though they all have hang on back or canister filters. Great to have a back up filter running incase one breaks which happened once when on holiday ofcourse!
Spot on
I like mine. Used a round lid on the hose and a regulator to help diffuse the bubbles. My HOB filters have been unreliable. Eventually they plug up. Switching over to the Hyyger style sponge filters in all my tanks now. You can adjust the angle of the outlet and the sponges so they are easier to hide. If they have two sponges you can pull an old one off to seed a new tank and pop a new one on without crashing the cycle. Im still new to the hobby but the pros far outweigh the cons for me.
I'm new to fish keeping but the fist sponge filters I own are aquarium coop filters. I have a 20g tall andba 36g bow front and I have a hob plus 2 sponge filters from the coop in both of my aquariums. I know they are ugly and take space but I feel safe in case the hob stops working because I have the aquarium co -op filters with a never clog stone running on a nano USB air pump. I know this setup only works 4 people with not that many thanks but so far has work for me.
I use a smaller sponge filter as well as a hob since it's basically an upgraded airstone. It sits in the corner behind a large amount of tall crypts so I barely see it at all.
Great video as always!
I've never used one, and probably never will.
I run sponge filters in all my 12 aquariums ranging from 90 to 3 gallons, primarily for bio filtration.
I have sponge filters for all my tanks plus a couple tiny hang on the backs for added filtration for two of the 16 tanks I have and I love them. For me it’s the electric less chords plugged in. I was struggling with the outlets for all the heaters and hob and light and then air stone. Side note. I don’t think they are that ugly. People always go right to how horrible they are. They do take up a lot of space plus you gotta think about the circulation. Still beneficial for me. Two thumbs up for me!
Prof. as always your honesty is awesome!!!!!! tell Madame Smallscape hello also! GSB
We’ll do!
Do I detect a little sarcasm? Lol.The hardest thing for me is is to take all the info that is out there and decide what is best. I think I finally have my tank set up and established to the point that it I requires very little maintenance. I narrowed it down to only watching a few fish keepers. You and Joanne are my top. Appreciate all the info you share. Im in for the relaxation and enjoyment. Thank you.
Thanks for pointing out the negatives of sponge filters---you weren't that hard on them... a good insight overall...just depends on use of time and appearance I think. I was an under gravel and hang-on back guy years ago. They all have their pluses and minuses. BREADERS like sponges and airs tones best I think.
I have two sponge filters because I only have two tanks. I also had a hang-on when I first started I just found that the hang-on was more expensive to maintain so I switched to sponge filters and I haven't regretted it.
A couple of decades ago, I got some sick fish from a breeder/importer friend of mine. These fish brought in some very virulent new diseases, mostly from Africa. There was literally no way to save the fish, most went fast, but they left behind aquariums that remained deadly to anything I put into them, plus the risk of spreading the diseases around my fish room were simply too high to play with these infected aquariums.
Chemically steralizing the tanks and gravel was pretty easy, but my sponge filters tended to dissolve in harsh disinfectant chamicals. At the time most of my sponge filters were new or almost new... What a waste!
I had some old box filters laying around from back when I was a kid in the 1960's, I upgraded the charcoal to lava rock, for their anerobic benefits breaking down nitrates and substituted polyfill for the glass wool... and they worked a treat! Lava rock was dirt cheap at the garden center and polyfill is also dirt cheap and is as easy to replace as a cartridge in a hang on back filter. Moar of the most advanced hobbiests also use box filters with gravel in them. For special circumstances I can add charcoal or any other special media to a box/corner filter as needed... and box filters are easy to steralize in bleach. peroxide or alcohol. Box filters also don't eat fry.
Box/corner filters are cheap, easier to clean, don't eat fry, easy to steralize, also run on air and are light years more flexible than sponge filters. And best of all, you can see exactly when they need to be cleaned by just looking into your tank.
As a seriious 50+ year hobbiest, breeder and published fish author, I intend no disrespect to folks that use sponge filters, (they do work) but if you are serious about keeping and breeding tropical fish and you are dealing with nitrates by changing water anyway... ditch the sponges and upgrade to box filters when you replace your sponge filters. You will never go back.
Yes idk why box filters r less popular.
@@qalpitor3458 Mostly because all of the "influencers" are sponsored or have their own gigs selling something new and improved to hobbyists that don't know better. "If you want to keep fish all you need to do is buy something expensive from me or my sponsor."
Box filters are very versatile, I'm hlad someone mentioned them.
I can't find box filters for love nor money.
The vital question is.....is it "sponge worthy" ?
Elaine says yes.
I use both.
HOB with extra sponges and floss,AND sponge filters with air stones in all tanks.
Mostly to keep a biological source in case I need an emergency tank set up,and to provide some air flow for warmer tanks.
For commercial guys, I see the application being used, but for my house it's cannister filters!! Cleaner, clear water! Also first video I've seen with a both sides review. I appreciate the honesty.
I use an aquarium coop sponge filter as the intake for my FX4 so it doesn't suck in the live bearer fry and keeps my kuhli loaches from getting to adventurous. I stacked two on top of each other and they just have an ungodly amount of capacity as a prefilter sponge because of how their held in the stack. it means that half of the tank is very relaxed current wise because all of that water volume is getting sucked in over a wide area instead of a small intake. I just used some plumbing parts so i can run vinyl tubing up to tank and just slid the vinyl over the lift tube. all i have to do is pop off the top cap and lift it up over the rocks and into a bag so i can get it to the sink. it really increases the amount of time i have in between taking apart the FX4 to about 3-4 months. And the sponge doesn't really get totally clogged that often either because of the sheer flow power the FX4 has it just kind gives the time for what ever is trapped in the sponge to mechanically or biologically break down before getting sucked down into the canister until it's drain time. All the benefits of mulm with none of it in the tank it's self.
Great video! Ya'll are the BEST!!
Glad you are here!
I use HMF filters with Czech air lifters in 4 out of 5 of my aquariums. And I will continue to add more aquariums with HMF filters in my aquarium room. They work perfect and they run for 2-3 years before they need a cleanup. I may use HOB filters if i should wish to filter over peath moss or activated charcoal, but the HMF are the chosen and prefered filter.
You got me! LOL....the end was the best!
I've only ever used sponge filters when I was growing small fry in a seperate tank
I have the Hygger double sponge filter with two compartments for filter media. (Not an ad for Hygger, there’s at least one other brand that makes these but mine is made by Hygger.) I really needed to increase my KH for my snails and for pH stability, and I didn’t want a crushed coral substrate, so I needed the compartments to put crushed coral in. I didn’t want a HOB filter because the bacteria can quickly die off if the filter stops running. My filter also came with two extra sponges and a lot of ceramic bio beads, more than the two compartments can hold. I alternate between the two and clean one sponge every week. I can rinse it in tap water and wring it out in the sink until the water runs completely clear, and it’s never caused my cycle to crash or caused a bacterial bloom. It’s way more of an eyesore than your average sponge filter, though. I almost returned it, but I’m glad I didn’t.
Edit: I actually got two in case I need to start a hospital tank, in which case I can just take out one of the two sponges from my tank and add it to the new filter.
Great tongue in cheek Jason.
I was thinking of getting one but I thought why would I get one when my current filter agitates the water surface and provide flow... I can't see how they can suck up water without producing a good flow... I think ill keep my internal filter!
When buying directly can I use it or
well i do agree with all you said but in my opinion the sponge with a powerhead is really good at mechanical and biological filtration although you do need to oversize the sponge and it does look ugly but if you are breading fish and dont do it on a larger scale and you hate the noise the airpump makes they are still the best option . i do have all types hob sponge internal and canister they all have theyr uses but sponge filter is still the easiest to maintain out of all of them :D
25 tanks from 5 to 175, every one uses sponge filters.
Most experienced aquarists I know, don't just pull floss out of their hob, they also rinse and return it to the filter after rinsing, which also gets yiur hands wet and waste time.
If you can't hide a sponge with aquascaping, you're doing it wrong.
👎
I think I might remove a HOB filter from the back of a tank once every couple years? :-)
I hate hobs, but use sponge filters attached as pre-filters to my canister filters, on my discus breeding tank I have two. It takes me 10 minutes to clean a canister and the sponge filter attached to it. I have a heavy duty air pump, but only use it for aeration on my tanks. But with any filters it all comes down to not over feeding and water changes. On my planted tanks I skip over the sponge for a fine stainless steel mesh filter guard as they look so much better. BTW I only clean my canisters on my planted tanks 4 times a year. On my discus once a month. How many times a year would you have to clean a HOB? I have used them and had to clean them weekly or at least every 2 weeks. Sponges are alright on pre-filters or a supplement filter, but not as main filtration, except if it is a large hamburg matten hooked up to a small pump rather than using air. I find air just does not pull the water through enough for my liking.
I use both sponge and HOB/or Shark filters. When I do a weekly water change (25%) the sponge filter stays on, it's more an oxygen provider than a filter for me. On the bigger 55's I switched to Hygger with easy slip-on sponges. Much cleaner Pleco heavy tanks with weekly sponge changes. I will switch all my remaining smaller sponge filters to the single-sponge or micro Hygger.
I used to use hob filters and sponge filters, but now I just use my guppy grass as my bio filtration and my tanks are just as clear as when I used hob filters.
As a thirty-five year aquarium enthusiast and sponge filter advocate, reading the title got my cackles up for sure. But I have to say, you ain't lying! Also, I guess beauty is subjective as I kinda like the look, especially the sound of the bubbles. Brings me back to the old days when mom and pop petshops were everywhere and you'd walk in and hear that beautiful sound of all those tanks running UGF's. And they certainly do go bad, especially when you have plecos knawing on them. I guess it all comes down to what makes you happy. I for one love the maintenance aspect of keeping fish so I'm not too bothered by the trouble. I also run power heads on my sponges in my big tanks, they do very well cleaning the debris, but need cleaning that more often. Take care and thanks for what you do!
Thanks for being here!
LOL Fantastic Video!!! They serve there purpose!! Needed for Fish Stores, wouldn't but it in my home Aquarium though! Love seeing them in fish stores instead of one giant sump pump filter running all there tanks due to disease. They serve there purpose for Fish stores. Love you Channel, just subscribed.
Thanks for being here!
i would love someone to make a hybrid filter.
the time it takes to clean a filter is irrelevant for me, as i only have 4 tanks.
however i would love to see a design that combines the multiple types of filtration into one superfilter.
it's like an HoB, with a swirl filter, with a sponge filter in the sump, with biomedia, with some kind of spillway filter.
it just sounds like that's where the industry is heading.
Never used one but I have two different ones. One is a Lee's plastic filter with carbon, rock, and floss in additional to a Tetra back filter.
Finally! Someone that is not pro sponge filters! I HATE sponge filters for all the reasons you listed!
Out of the 26 tanks that we have, what's not running either under gravel, or hang on backs, we run sponge filters, some we run a combo of hob and sponge, every tank from our 5s to our 240s , no canisters here, ugf, hob or sponge, with the exception of one running a diatamatious earth filter.
You really got me on that Jason
My rule for sponge filters is hook them up to a 60 or a 100 gallon air pump min and you’ll be fine
We just switched our daughter's beta tank to a sponge filter. It is a rinky, budget 3 gallon tank that had come with one of those Tetra Whisper 1-5 gallon filters that runs on an air pump. We had bought the tank used and the filter was no longer drawing up water unless we filled the tank to almost overflowing. It would only be a day or two and enough water evaporated to the point it wouldn't run anymore. I now found a basic sponge filter and attached it to the air pump system we already have and am hoping for the best. We have an air bubbler in there already and now it just seems too crowded. We'll probably have to pull out the air bubbler even though it's the tank's only real light source (we have a table lamp right beside the tank to add more light). The sponge is teeny so I don't think we could fit an air stone inside even if we wanted so I guess we're just going to have big, globby bubbles. I am pretty sure our daughter won't be keen to deal with the dripping poop water though.
This beta is our first fish and we've kept him alive for a year now so I am determined to keep him going for at least another one or more. I am scouring the videos to see how to tell if it is working properly or not. The air pump system itself may be what is failing (it is used, after all).
I have 10gal tanks with shrimp, so these guys are the best. :) If I had a bigger tank with bigger fish...I'd not use these guys. I am thinking of grabbing Aquarium Co Op sponge liter and trying it out. :)
Like others have said I keep large pore sponge filters in my tanks because we have recurring power shut offs in our area. I run battery back up air pumps to keep them going until I can get home and get the generator running and start the HOB’s and canisters going again. We don’t run the generator at night, so they come into play then also. I think it keeps the biological filtration stable and causes less stress on the fish.
I use a sponge/HOB combination in every tank. That's been the winning combo for me for years.
I use both hang on back filter and sponge filter in the same tank. Is this good to do? I'm new in the hobby
Sure - we do that in a number of tanks.
There is no such thing as too much filtration.
Having used sponges, hang on back, and canister filters I have to say that my #1 is the hang on back. For me it strikes the best compromise between filtering capacity and easy of upkeep. Now if I had a livebearer breeding tank I would almost certainly go with sponge filters. Same if I had a bunch of tanks. That way I could just plumb in an air system and tap in and run all of the filters off of a single air pump. another advantage to the sponge filters is that you don't have that filter hanging on the back meaning you can slide the tank back a few more inches to free up floor space.
If I only had a few tanks HOB for me too!
I love them in my breeding tanks. The fry absolutely love to feed off them. Yes they are ugly but they really do have an important place in my fish room.
OMG. Title made scared coz I use these. You and your channel are the reason I bought sponge filter 😅
Fun twist at the end!
What's a good set up for a 20 gallon fish tank with a black moor and goldfish.
GREAT VIDEO
If you were running a rack of ONLY 3, 20 longs, lightly stocked would you recommend sponge filters, dual sponge filters or HOB?
Peace ✌️
I would probably run three HOB - probably three Seachem Tidal 35
Haha great video! I have 18 tanks and all have Sponge filters on them.. Not a lot of aqua-scape though except my two displays, and they have a canister filter no sponge filters just because they are too large and the sponge filters typically don't come in large enough sizes for big tanks.. However every tank aside those has sponge filters. They are messy but I don't think I would ever go back to HOB because sometimes I forget to change the cartridge and that leads to over flowing and a watery mess since each bio-load is different, so sponge filters make for an easy change, I can see when it needs to be cleaned out rather than checking on the HOB every week to hope it doesn't overflow. But everyone's fish keeping style and preferences are different and what works for them may not work for me! Side note*** I think sponge filters cycle an aquarium faster than a HOB as well, I had a tank cycled in 5 days (30g) when I added a sponge filter when transferring the tank from a HOB, and had my 150G stock tank cycled in roughly 2 weeks if that (with 2 80G sponge filters) Then my display cycled in 4mos with a canister filter! Definitely hold a better environment for BB :) Awesome video and very informal! Love your videos, huge fan!
@fish friendzy are you using a sponge filter from an established tank or a new sponge filter?
A Matten corner filter in the left or right rear corner of the tank gives you more surface area, is more easily disguised, and has the same footprint as your typical clunky sponge filter. In addition it will provide directional surface agitation which will yield better circulation. You just need to plan for and install it when starting up (or renovating) the tank, as it requires waiting for the silicone to dry on the holding frame pieces. You once said you were intrigued and would one day audition one. What are you waiting for?
I do need to try it still. Haha. Part of it is how heavily I stock some of my tanks. I have to clean the sponge filters every week to keep the tanks clear. The though of having to do that with a corner matten filter scares me a bit.
@@PrimeTimeAquatics Well, I take your point about a heavily stocked tank. You need to be fast on your toes, so to speak, especially with so many tanks. You're really working on a different plane than your average viewer with 2 or 3 tanks in their bedroom. Two points. If you set up a more permanent, moderately stocked tank, something for watching and presentation, a show tank, the Matten corner filter is certainly is a prime choice if you're not going for a powered HOB. Second, it certainly gains "bio media" surface area over a standard sponge filter and should last a long, long time between cleaning. Just don't pile up gravel at it's base and it should be easy to remove the top reflector and slide the sponge up and out.
I like how Jason looks so proud in the thumbnail saying sponge filters are the worst type of Filtration 😂
Can someone explain how this works? I dint get how pumping air into the sponge acts as a filter
For me it isn't a issue I run a Fluval 107 on my 55 and two sponge filters you barely notice the lines all you notice is the bubbles which I like they are cleverly hidden by my plants. I have 10 Discus snails 4 German Ballon rams 2 electric blue some rummy nose and some other tetras any loses have been due to expiration date.. it was their time I keep a quarantine tank been successful so far treating and sick fish and I also keep a shrimp tank with cherries and bamboo shrimp with mechanical and a sponge filter I believe the benefits outweigh the issues. You can always get creative and mask them with features or plants. Love the Chanel and the information. Thank you..