Qs Tip #10 Use a sponge pre-filter

Que

I wish I was a fish I wish.
Feb 15, 2007
2,449
12
38
Southern Berkshire county, MA
Real Name
Ken
Camera Used
cell phone
Qs Tip #10 Using a sponge pre-filter

To help keep fish fry and shrimp out of your filter it is suggested you use a sponge pre-filter. This can be commercially bought or you can make one yourself by cutting a hole into a chunk of open cell foam and fitting it onto your filters intake tube. The spong holes are too small for the fry and shrimp to get sucked into.

The side benefits to this are added surface area for beneficial bacteria to latch onto. Algea may grow on it and food will get stuck to it providing nibbles for the shrimp. In a planted tank small plantlets from crypts and java ferns and the like will be easy to gather.

Another tip... use a media bag or a piece of panty hose to contain the debris on the sponge before shutting the filter off and removing the sponge for maintenance.

Q

Qs-Tips
#1 Hardscape tip
#2 Extra plant height
#3 Expired!
#4 Get organized
#5 Plants on a stick
#6 Use your senses
#7 Cleaning the outside glass
#8 Cleaning the Python
#9 Starting a siphon without sucking
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I use media bags all the time in my shrimp tanks. Works well, you can slide a net over and remove it attached to the intake them blast it out with water from the top of the intake tube.
 
Media bags usually have a draw string but you can use a rubber band too.

Q
 
What is the best way to fit mesh material over an intake? Mine always seem to slide down the intake tube, allowing baby shrimp many gaps to adventure into!

I used a small zip-tie to keep the mesh secured to my intake tube, it had a lip right above the strainer that made it nearly impossible to pull off. So I did what msjinkzd suggested and just took the whole intake tube off for cleaning.
 
AquariaCentral.com