During the weekend, I removed all the glass patches, used a razor blade scraper to remove the silicone and then completely removed the trim on the bottom of the tank. This gives me full access underneath to the crack so I can completely patch it this time. I'm getting acetone today to finish cleaning it up.
I'm going to do this differently this time, instead of smearing silicone on the glass pane and sticking it to the glass, I'm going to run a bead of silicone on all the cracks and them smear it to about 3" or so on either side. Then will let it dry a few days. Then once the glass arrives i will then add it to the bottom of the tank and silicone it in place and wait a few days again. I think by doing it this way, the silicone can actually cure because when I removed the old glass panes, the silicone was not cured, looked like I just put it on there.
I actually like the look of the tank without the trim, makes it look bigger. The trim was broke anyways so it was time for it to go.
I'm feeling pretty good with this approach, this time around. I will then test fill it half way and wait a day or so to check for leak, while cleaning up the outside of the tank.
I'm going to do this differently this time, instead of smearing silicone on the glass pane and sticking it to the glass, I'm going to run a bead of silicone on all the cracks and them smear it to about 3" or so on either side. Then will let it dry a few days. Then once the glass arrives i will then add it to the bottom of the tank and silicone it in place and wait a few days again. I think by doing it this way, the silicone can actually cure because when I removed the old glass panes, the silicone was not cured, looked like I just put it on there.
I actually like the look of the tank without the trim, makes it look bigger. The trim was broke anyways so it was time for it to go.
I'm feeling pretty good with this approach, this time around. I will then test fill it half way and wait a day or so to check for leak, while cleaning up the outside of the tank.

