Description
IPF-408
Dimensions: 75 x 38 x 113mm
Flow Rate: 200L/Hr
Wattage: 2w
Filter Compartments: 1
IPF-448
Dimensions: 103 x 60 x 208mm
Flow Rate: 450L/Hr
Wattage: 6w
Filter Compartments: 1
IPF-728
Dimensions: 105 x 65 x 210mm
Flow Rate: 720L/Hr
Wattage: 10w
Filter Compartments: 1
IPF-1008
Dimensions: 80 x 60 x 364mm
Flow Rate: 1020L/Hr
Wattage: 12w
Filter Compartments: 2
IPF-1508
Dimensions: 102 x 70 x 365mm
Flow Rate: 1500L/Hr
Wattage: 22w
Filter Compartments: 2
Jeneca IPF internal filters (408 to 1508) for SG tanks
The IPF range runs from the tiny IPF-408 at 200L/hr up to the IPF-1508 at 1500L/hr, so there’s an internal filter here for everything from a betta nano to a stocked community tank. We recommend internal filters when you want filtration fully inside the tank with no hang-on profile or external plumbing, which suits compact HDB and condo setups where every centimetre behind and beside the tank counts. The larger models add a second filter compartment for more media.
Internal filters double as a handy way to drive surface movement and oxygenation, which matters in our warm 27-29C water that holds less dissolved oxygen. Aim the outlet to ripple the surface a little. Load the chambers with sponge plus biological media rather than leaning on a single cartridge, and rinse in old tank water at maintenance so you don’t crash your cycle. Tuck the body into a corner where plants or hardscape hide it.
Browse our filtration and aquarium equipment range, compare small-tank options in our nano internal filter guide, and weigh filter types using our sponge vs HOB vs internal comparison.

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