There's cheap insurance to increase the safety margin then there's overkill.
If you want to kill an ant do you step on it? Run over it with a truck or drop an atom bomb? Do you reeealy need an atom bomb to kill an ant? You want to make sure it's dead so it doesn't come back to bite you but come on.... I'm just saying it's a waste of time and money. If somebody doesn't mind spending the time and money that's their prerogative. But I just sit here and shake my head at the overkill.
Sashi- don't take this wrong, but from what I know, you've only built a 7 footer and have only had it a few years. I think your tank is awesome BTW. But when you get to 8+ feet, there's a lot more of the unknown going on. My DIY 8 foot tank only lasted 4 years because it was under-built perhaps. After about 2 years, the wear and tear started to become noticeable. By year 3, warping on the plexi and bowing was beginning to worry me. By year 4, there was cracking/crazing in most of the seams, so I replaced the tank before it eventually failed.
Now a 7 foot tank, like the one you built, might not ever have those same problems, but an 8+ footer could. My next big tank build, if it's over 8+ feet, will be overkill, even if you are shaking your head. I don't understand the over-confidence, especially since you have a mechanical engineering degree. You should know that even the best laid plans can fail. I remember some of the lab assignments I had when I was taking engineering courses, and it seemed like human error was a common conclusion in many of my technical reports. Engineers aren't perfect.