Hello everyone,
Im in the process of building a new house (I build custom homes for a living). The framing is getting completed as I type. My goal is to have a inwall 750g plywood tank in the basement overlooking my mancave. The Tank is to be 120" long x 48" deep x 30" tall. Im struggling with a few things about my build right now and im hoping some of you all can help me make the hard discussions. My thought with the 10' long tank is because i can get 120" x 48" x 3/4" plywood from my lumber company. Its special order and kinda pricy, but I think the extra 2 feed will look amazing. If I get to the point where im not 100% confident in the 10' length holding up, ill downgrade to a 8' length. I have seen lots of 8' plywood tanks with success, but never seen a 10'.
Here is picture of what ive done so far. The framing is finished and the Plumbing for the sink is finished.
First my glass: Thickness and Annealed vs Tempered.
Ive contacted 3 of my local Glass companys that I use for homes to get there opinions between annealed vs tempered glass. They all believe that i should go with tempered glass for a few reasons. Its much stronger and can handle kids in the basments. Also they say if it breaks, the shards are small and while they will hurt children, they will not harm them like giant sharp shards of annealed. Lastly they all said that both tempered and Annealed glass both has the same problems strength in the edges. The only downfall of Tempered is that i can crack a edge with Annealed and Tempered would crack the whole thing. Im leaning toward Tempered but wanted other opinions.
I also have done my limited research on these boards and I tend to lean toward a piece of 3/4" glass for the front panel. Can anyone check this for me. I think it might actually be a bit of overkill. I figure that piece is gonna cost me around 1200 dollars.
Second: Plywood bracing: Double up plywood/Metal corners/2x4s
Because of the 10' length, I believe im going to need to address bowing in the back 10' wall. Also maybe beef up the corners as there is a extra 200g of pressure pushing on them compaired to a 8' tank. I plan on having the tank top braced with 2 front to back braces. Everything can be modified if someone can give me better ideas.
My first thought was to build a 2x4 wall around the back edge of the tank from floor to ceiling. While i think this would work well, it will make it horrible to work in the tank.
My second idea was to get a local welder to wield corner bracing around the corners of the tank and maybe 2 braces on the back side. I think this idea is my best structurally, but the tank will be saltwater, so rusting will be a huge issue. I plan on epoxying the whole outside anyway to prevent water from getting to the plywood.
The 3rd option was to double up the plywood on the whole tank to 2x thickness, glue and screw it together. I also could beef up the corners with extra wood. I think this would work, but wanted opinions.
3rd: Overflows
Do most people add the overflow after the tank is built on the back, or do they add them inside the tank. Is one easier?
4th: Rock Wall.
I plan on building a concrete/rock wall around the back 3 sides of the tank. I want to have 3 or 4 glass portholes to see in from the back, but generally i want the tank to look like a walled reef. Does anyone have any recommendations on how to mount it to the epoxy wall? I thought about adding a few mounting brackets somehow to the tank before epoxying. Then i can mount the concrete around the brackets, like they do with brick walls. Ideas?
Thanks everyone for the help
Im in the process of building a new house (I build custom homes for a living). The framing is getting completed as I type. My goal is to have a inwall 750g plywood tank in the basement overlooking my mancave. The Tank is to be 120" long x 48" deep x 30" tall. Im struggling with a few things about my build right now and im hoping some of you all can help me make the hard discussions. My thought with the 10' long tank is because i can get 120" x 48" x 3/4" plywood from my lumber company. Its special order and kinda pricy, but I think the extra 2 feed will look amazing. If I get to the point where im not 100% confident in the 10' length holding up, ill downgrade to a 8' length. I have seen lots of 8' plywood tanks with success, but never seen a 10'.
Here is picture of what ive done so far. The framing is finished and the Plumbing for the sink is finished.
First my glass: Thickness and Annealed vs Tempered.
Ive contacted 3 of my local Glass companys that I use for homes to get there opinions between annealed vs tempered glass. They all believe that i should go with tempered glass for a few reasons. Its much stronger and can handle kids in the basments. Also they say if it breaks, the shards are small and while they will hurt children, they will not harm them like giant sharp shards of annealed. Lastly they all said that both tempered and Annealed glass both has the same problems strength in the edges. The only downfall of Tempered is that i can crack a edge with Annealed and Tempered would crack the whole thing. Im leaning toward Tempered but wanted other opinions.
I also have done my limited research on these boards and I tend to lean toward a piece of 3/4" glass for the front panel. Can anyone check this for me. I think it might actually be a bit of overkill. I figure that piece is gonna cost me around 1200 dollars.
Second: Plywood bracing: Double up plywood/Metal corners/2x4s
Because of the 10' length, I believe im going to need to address bowing in the back 10' wall. Also maybe beef up the corners as there is a extra 200g of pressure pushing on them compaired to a 8' tank. I plan on having the tank top braced with 2 front to back braces. Everything can be modified if someone can give me better ideas.
My first thought was to build a 2x4 wall around the back edge of the tank from floor to ceiling. While i think this would work well, it will make it horrible to work in the tank.
My second idea was to get a local welder to wield corner bracing around the corners of the tank and maybe 2 braces on the back side. I think this idea is my best structurally, but the tank will be saltwater, so rusting will be a huge issue. I plan on epoxying the whole outside anyway to prevent water from getting to the plywood.
The 3rd option was to double up the plywood on the whole tank to 2x thickness, glue and screw it together. I also could beef up the corners with extra wood. I think this would work, but wanted opinions.
3rd: Overflows
Do most people add the overflow after the tank is built on the back, or do they add them inside the tank. Is one easier?
4th: Rock Wall.
I plan on building a concrete/rock wall around the back 3 sides of the tank. I want to have 3 or 4 glass portholes to see in from the back, but generally i want the tank to look like a walled reef. Does anyone have any recommendations on how to mount it to the epoxy wall? I thought about adding a few mounting brackets somehow to the tank before epoxying. Then i can mount the concrete around the brackets, like they do with brick walls. Ideas?
Thanks everyone for the help