4'x3'x17" all acrylic build

doomiedee

Fire Eel
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Nov 13, 2011
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Silent Bob

Plecostomus
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Nov 25, 2011
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Looking good so far. Now I know who to call when I want to build that custom tank for the house.
If this one doesn't explode that has possibilities. PM me when your ready. If you can't tell I have the DIY bug right now lol.

Fantastic work so far!!
Would be better if I could get around to cutting the bottom.

epic tank.
Epic tank or epic failure. We shall see.

Awesome tank I love the footprint.


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For the little guy calling it home it will be.:D
 

Phixer

Gambusia
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Jan 14, 2007
254
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4-6mm is what your aiming for.

A larger gap means more cement, more cement = more heating. More heating = an exothermic reaction which is essentially the cement boiling from the heat. The boiling is what causes excess bubbles. By keeping the gap 4-6mm when bonding you are allowing enough cement for it to polymerize properly and not to much for it to boil.

Hope that makes better sense.
 

Lil_Stinker

Fire Eel
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May 30, 2006
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I agree. 4-6mm seems large, huge even.
I could be way off here, but with acrylic aren't you looking for < 1mm?

You may bash me now
 

Silent Bob

Plecostomus
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Nov 25, 2011
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Phixer it makes perfect sense to me and appreciate the post. I just can't see 4-6mm being right. Your talking about almost an 1/8"-1/4" glue gap? Sure you don't mean .4-.6mm?
 

Phixer

Gambusia
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Jan 14, 2007
254
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Phixer it makes perfect sense to me and appreciate the post. I just can't see 4-6mm being right. Your talking about almost an 1/8"-1/4" glue gap? Sure you don't mean .4-.6mm?
Hi Bob. Yes thats a pretty big gap, after the cement is poured I nudge the panels closer together with a rubber dead blow mallet. When bonding with 2 part cements 20% shrinkage is the norm. As the cement polymerizes the panels will be pulled together closing the gap. Easy for 1/4 -1/2 material on it's own but needs assistance for the thicker stuff which is generally what the 2 part cement is used for anyhow. IMG_0688.JPGIMG_0689.JPGIMG_0690.JPGIMG_0691.JPGMost folks dont consider these factors and end up with excess bubbles or creases in the joint. If the panels are not allowed to move as the cement dries you end up with creases in the joint, this is very common and looks like this (see attached photo). If the panels are too large and heavy to move on their own (i.e sheet of 2" thick material) they need to be moved closer together by hand as the cement dries.

I hope that makes more sense. Yes, a 6mm gap when dry would be too big.

IMG_0688.JPG

IMG_0689.JPG

IMG_0690.JPG

IMG_0691.JPG
 

Silent Bob

Plecostomus
MFK Member
Nov 25, 2011
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Update time. Finally brought the bottom home so I can finish putting this tank together. Test fit all the parts tonight and will start gluing tomorrow.
uploadfromtaptalk1387239783193.jpg
uploadfromtaptalk1387239812192.jpg
 

David R

Blue Tier VIP
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Apr 26, 2005
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That is a fantastic shape for an aquarium!
 
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