Hi Joe, I think some who are making posts to this thread are not reading through and so dont get it, understand it. Most of your questions are good, yes we talked about the steel and plastic banding but because of the maching to tighten that up we gave that idea up. The purpose is just to give a real lot of holding power of the front and back pane glass to the sides and bottom of the tank. I know it wont help with people having a bowing problem. I have read posts with front pane poping and other problems. I want this set up to last a long time so am taking my time with the whole project. I put a whole lumber yard inside the stand to make it last 50 years with water splashes from big fish. Now for the tank, you know it would be a disaster for the pane to pop off or any other problem with a 300 gal. I try to think of ideas that may help in ANY way. I have done a test sample of the ordinary nylon tape, about 3/4 inch wide around the bottom 9 times. The tape is rated at around 40 or 50 lbs one strand. I have neatly and professionally layered 9 times the tank bottom so far. I put each layer exactly on top of the other layer so it look professional. When going around each time it gets so strong, similar to a flat nylon rope tightly wound around. With so many layers it seems there is no flexibility but just a massive amount of holding power. The 3./4 inch glass probably will have little bowing and extreme holding power with the silicon, good Eurobracing at the top and reinforced with extra glass at the bottom built by the builder and the nylon tape. What I am trying to accomplish is just to hold all the seams together for a very long time. I seem to have found a good idea and want to share this with others who have big tanks. Of course you still have to level the stand, level the weight on the stand from the tank, take all the regular precautions. The neatly wound nylon can be covered with black silicon to preserve and hide the nylon. The nylon tape with some glue seems to have no affect to the silicon and is just in contact with the very outside part. There is no water in the tank yet so no bowing etc. Original bracing was hard black plastic trim along the top 1 1/2 inch wide. and just glass on the bottom with extra bracing inside the tank, a strip of glass with silicon. I think you are the only one who has tried hard to understand the consept, the others are skimming through so fast thay are not getting it.Dr Joe;1439460; said:We need pix of your install.
What was the original bracing on the tank.
How much deflection did it have before the addition of the tape?
After?
We talked about using strapping tape (non-adhesive) last month.
What brand of tape are use specifically using?
What is the stretch factor? (if any it is for naught.)
Did you test compatibility of the silicone you used with the tape?
Dr Joe
.
brcacti;1440331; said:Now for the tank, you know it would be a disaster for the pane to pop off or any other problem with a 300 gal. ... I have done a test sample of the ordinary nylon tape, about 3/4 inch wide around the bottom 9 times. The tape is rated at around 40 or 50 lbs one strand. I have neatly and professionally layered 9 times the tank bottom so far. ... When going around each time it gets so strong, similar to a flat nylon rope tightly wound around. With so many layers it seems there is no flexibility but just a massive amount of holding power. The 3./4 inch glass probably will have little bowing and extreme holding power with the silicon, good Eurobracing at the top and reinforced with extra glass at the bottom built by the builder and the nylon tape. What I am trying to accomplish is just to hold all the seams together for a very long time. I seem to have found a good idea and want to share this with others who have big tanks. Of course you still have to level the stand, level the weight on the stand from the tank, take all the regular precautions. The neatly wound nylon can be covered with black silicon to preserve and hide the nylon. The nylon tape with some glue seems to have no affect to the silicon and is just in contact with the very outside part. There is no water in the tank yet so no bowing etc. Original bracing was hard black plastic trim along the top 1 1/2 inch wide. and just glass on the bottom with extra bracing inside the tank, a strip of glass with silicon. I think you are the only one who has tried hard to understand the consept, the others are skimming through so fast thay are not getting it.