Wave Maker vs. Powerhead: What Your Fish Tank Actually Needs

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Proper wave maker placement eliminates dead zones, keeps debris suspended for filtration, and ensures your corals or fish receive adequate oxygen. Core Placement Strategies

The Cross-Flow Setup: Place one wave maker on the left wall pointing slightly upward, and another on the right wall at a similar height. This creates a circular, turbulent flow that mimics natural ocean reefs.

The Surface Agitation Setup: Position the wave maker high up on the side glass, aiming slightly toward the water surface. This breaks surface tension to maximize gas exchange and oxygenate the water.

The Back-Wall Bounce: Place the pump on the back glass, pointing directly at the front glass. The water collides with the front pane and splits into a gentle, wide-dispersing current. Optimizing Flow for Tank Types

SPS Coral Tanks: Position multiple pumps to create high-velocity, random, and turbulent flow throughout the entire water column.

LPS and Soft Coral Tanks: Aim pumps at the glass walls rather than directly at the corals to create gentle, swaying, indirect currents.

Freshwater / River Tanks: Place a single powerful unit on one side wall, pointing straight across the length of the tank to create a unidirectional river current. Mistakes to Avoid

Blasting Substrate: Avoid pointing pumps downward, which creates sandstorms and uncovers the tank bottom.

Direct Coral Blasting: Never aim a wave maker directly at a coral, as high-velocity pinpoint flow will tear their delicate tissue.

Ignoring Dead Spots: Look for areas where fish waste accumulates on the sand; adjust pump angles to sweep these zones clean. If you want to fine-tune your setup, tell me: What is your aquarium volume and shape? Are you keeping SPS, LPS, soft corals, or fish-only? How many wave makers do you currently have?

I can give you a custom placement diagram plan for your specific tank.

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