The canister will not trip, it will suck air, over heat and burn.
I have a few questions/doubts on Eheim Canister Filter before buying it.
Typically,
the Output (spraybar) from the filter will be placed on the top of the tank and
the Intake into the filter will be placed near to the bottom of the tank.
Question,
can I reverse this setup as in I want the Intake to be near the water surface
and the output to be at the bottom of the tank?
Any possible issue/implication?
If the water evaporates too fast and I forgot to topup water to the tank, the water surface is likely to go below the intake. Would the Canister Filter "trip" and stop by itself or would it continue running by sucking air instead of water?
I am asking these because I am going to setup something different, a canister filter for 2 tanks connecting by a water bridge.
Thank you in advance.
from 14L to 8L tank.
The canister will not trip, it will suck air, over heat and burn.
Try surface skimmer bro. 12dollar ish. They adjust the water level accordingly.
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If you worry about evaporation, keep a bottle of water handy near the tank.
If you've learnt, teach, if you have, give.
Don't walk behind me as I might not lead, don't walk in front of me as I might not follow. Walk beside me, as my friend.
Mohamad Rohaizal is my name. If it's too hard, use BFG. I don't mind.
Sorry for my confusing post.
I put it in another way for easier illustration of my real intention.
I wanted to place the inlet near to the water surface because I want the canister filter to "trip" by itself when the inlet goes above the water level.
The way I am going to connect the filter is to have inlet in one tank and outlet in another, both connected by a water bridge.
If the filter can trip, then it will stop an overflow problem-to-be.
from 14L to 8L tank.
both tank at the same lever or top and bottom?
If catch fire. Many things will burn :P
Is the tank one of those you place above the console or other tanks. ?
Learning the hardway, not the highway.
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"if he cant be bothered to take the time to write his question properly, why should I take the time to answer him."
1st of all, why would you want to reverse the intake?
If it's in fear of protein buildup or stuff similar, IMHO just use skimmer.
2nd, i asked intake and of course i ask outflow.
If you use water bridge, even if your tanks are not leveled. The water level should be, due to the principle of gravity that is working the water bridge.
Learning the hardway, not the highway.
Photo Blog - impervious-endeavors.blogspot.com
Semi-Active currently
"if he cant be bothered to take the time to write his question properly, why should I take the time to answer him."
The filter would not trip. However, if the water level goes below the water bridge, all the water will exit from the water bridge into the tank. Depending on the size of the water bridge, the extra water might overflow out of both tank.
If you've learnt, teach, if you have, give.
Don't walk behind me as I might not lead, don't walk in front of me as I might not follow. Walk beside me, as my friend.
Mohamad Rohaizal is my name. If it's too hard, use BFG. I don't mind.
not because of the skimmer, but I am thinking of a method to prevent overflow when I go ahead with a canister filter to connect the 2 tanks.
so I am thinking if the canister filter will trip by itself if it is sucking air instead of water. If it can trip, then I will place the inlet slightly below the water surface, so that the filter will trip and stop sucking the water to the water tank.
but looks like this is not possible liao, since the filter can't trip by itself.
that's also one of the things that I worried, if the water bridge stop functioning, then the filter will suck all the water from one tank to the other, then my shrimps will start to explore a new world outside the tank.![]()
from 14L to 8L tank.
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