Not unless the directions that came with the filter tell you it is ok to do so.
Charcoal cannot be cleaned and reused. Charcoal is highly porous (has tiny holes in it) and those tiny holes get filled with gunk over a period of 4-6 weeks, when the charcoal should be discarded. It cannot be regenerated.
An hour after the water is being cleaned by the filter than its safe to put them in.
Filter a fish? Do you mean filtering a fish's tank? Well you have to filter any fish's tank.
That depends on the kind of filter you have. The best filter you can get is a power filter with compartments for different filter media. With one of these you can easily clean out one media at a time thus keeping the cycled bacteria in there. The worst filter of the lot which IMO should never be used, is an undergravel filter because it can not be serviced or cleaned at all. A filter should only be cleaned when the water flow is badly reduced. Only replace some of the media and only rinse loose rubbish off what you keep. The reason for this is to preserve the good Ammonia and Nitrite removing bacteria that have formed in the filter.
no filter because for smaller fish it can hurt or even kill them and for the old filter use bigger fish
a fish filter cleans the water and a pump pushes it through a fish filter cleans the water and a pump pushes it through
Gravel in a fish tank should be cleaned regularly, ideally once a month, to remove waste and debris that can harm the fish and affect water quality.
If you cleaned it
An aquarium filter is a device that either submerges, hangs on the back of or sits underneath the stand of the aquarium. It processes the aquarium water to collect debris and harmful chemicals and bacteria while returning the water to the tank more cleaned.
The filter removes the fish waste and some of the other impurities.
yes,it is hard to clean out a pet fish's filter
Provided it is properly cleaned, driftwood can be a good adition to a fish tank.