Glass VS Acrylic

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Cichlid savage II

Candiru
MFK Member
Mar 11, 2021
131
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Middle River, MD
I'm sure this has been posted a million times, so I'm going to add some specifics to mine.

96Lx36Wx30H approx 425 gallons

Glass 627lbs dry weight
Acrylic 482lbs dry weight

Glass cost includes a cellular pad and lids. They will be an additional cost for the acrylic tank

Glass is approximately $700 more as each are described.
 
I'm sure this has been posted a million times, so I'm going to add some specifics to mine.

96Lx36Wx30H approx 425 gallons

Glass 627lbs dry weight
Acrylic 482lbs dry weight

Glass cost includes a cellular pad and lids. They will be an additional cost for the acrylic tank

Glass is approximately $700 more as each are described.
A piece of foam from HD to place under the finished tank should only run you about $20.
Pro for glass is it doesn't scratch as easily as acrylic
Pro for acrylic is that 2 strong people can move a tank that size.
Acrylic properly cared for will always have better visual clarity
Glass is easier to patch if you change your mind on bottom drain holes.
I would go all acrylic in my fish room if I could
 
Acrylics keep in heat better than glass. And heating up a huge amount of water takes up a lot of energy
 
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I went with acrylic because it insulates heat better, has better clarity, and is much lighter than glass. In my case, when I got my 4x8 tank it was close to the cost of a glass tank. Also, acrylic is much stronger and if built correctly you do not need to worry about seams like you do with glass.

I will say a big factor is the fish you want to keep. Acrylic scratches much easier and I heard that those that are into puffers, plecos and some other fish go with glass so the fish do not destroy the tank. In my case, I was planning to have a large aimara wolf fish that once it gets to 30in it could potentially break a 3/4in thick glass tank.
 
I like glass better. I could go into counterpoints for everything said above but I really just think it's more impressive all around than acrylic.

i like this -

glass was too heavy to get into my house -

it’s sad when one scratches their pretty acyrlic tank....

i’m torn though - seams breaking vs pretty -

id like a big glass tank
 
Since this thread is getting some more attention:

Ive heard the "100 year" example several times now. In response to this I say: please show me an acrylic tank that has held water for 100 years. If not, show me one that's lasted 75 years. 50 years? 40? 30? I doubt we will see one. Because it doesnt exist. If it does, its scratched to hell and looks like dogs butt. But acrylic can be reconditioned---BUT---so can glass...

Acrylic is lighter, but you need thicker acrylic when compared to glass ime. If you use substandard acrylic, you will get bowing and your seams or panels will fail, be it 6 months or 10 years down the road.
compare the weight of 3/4" glass to 1-1/4"+ acrylic, and the difference is negligible. In reality, a large tank made from either is equally "friggin heavy" and requires the proper methods and equipment to move safely and efficiently.

As for clarity....the clarity issue is for two types of people: overtly analytical OCD people and acrylic tank sellers. Personally, I will not appreciate my fish any more seen under 99% clarity vs. 85%. I've never thought once that any of my fish appeared slightly too green for my liking when looking through glass.

As to the above statement about a 30" wolf breaking a 3/4" glass panel, I am skeptical. As a missourian would say, you'll have to show me.

It is true that with monster sized tanks, acrylic has the edge because thick acrylic is much more readily available than glass, but it must be known that there are manufacturers that make low iron glass in incredible thickness (1-1/2"+), albeit at exorbitant expense and weight.

And lastly, the seams failing issue. In my personal experience, I cannot claim a winner here. Tanks fail for many reasons, chiefly amongst them user error. I suspect that 90+% of sudden seam failures in both acrylic and glass tanks are due to oversight or accidents by the tanks owner, whether that be in aquascaping, maintenance, or improper setup. The other 10% are just the lemons of both varieties. Like I said, just my theory.

Anyways, the whole thing boils down to personal preference imo.
 
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