I don't understand in this day and age, why they can't make an aquarium that is made of super durable, scratch resistance material, easy to move and dirt cheap, it's only has 5 sides to it with some glue, how hard can it be.
My tank busters hit the tank walls so hard, it sounds like an explosion. I have long ago stopped running to check on the tank everytime there is loud crash. If my tank was glass, my pacu probably might have broken the tank by now. Yes, there are a few inch long scratches on the acrylic on the inside...from pacu teeth... My fish will continue to do what they do, and I'm OK with it.My new tank weighs about 2,000 pounds. I can't imagine what a similar sized glass tank would weigh. Silicone seams tend to fail more frequently than acrylic joints, another reason I would opt for acrylic.I think glass is great for smaller tanks, but for tanks larger than a couple of hundred gallons, I would go with acrylic every time.Looking at a 600Gallon tank (2400 litres)just wondering, cos acrylic seems to be very cost effective, must must more, as in, 60% to 70% cheaper.how easy is it to avoid scratches on them? no kids around ok.also was thinking of putting a thin film on the outside at the front used in household windows, clear to protect it.any ideas?feedback?i dont want the tank to be so extremely scratched.mag float offers a product especialy for acrylic. is that ok?
If you're going to get a huge tank like a 600 gallon, you've gotta get an acrylic. If you get glass then you'll need about 12 guys to even lift it (no joke) and they'll be dead tired from moving it 20 feet.
Also, acrylic is 10x more break-resistant and stronger than glass. If you dropped a 10 lb. dumbbell on a glass tank, it would shatter. But an acrylic tank would be dented and scratched but wouldn't break. Who cares if acrylic is more prone to scratching. At that size, you need the strongest tank you can get and acrylic is the much safer bet.
from my experience with both large glass and acrylic aquariums from all aspects (moving, setting up, scratches, shattering etc) you are wrong on all counts. what is your real world experience with both?