I have recently begun experiencing the breakdown/decomposition of silicone items around my house. It's gotten me thinking about the silicone seals we rely on so much.
Somewhere around the 9 year mark, the silicone items in my kitchen start to become extremely oily. They pick up tons of debris. No matter how well I wash the oil off, it just reappears the next time I go to use it. Within two years the item becomes extremely brittle and fails.
The age of the silicone items failing in my house is very close to the recommended 10-15 year lifespan for an aquarium. However, I have never experienced aquarium silicone getting oily and overly sticky. One of the LFS's I worked at had an ancient slate bottomed tank, the silicone was brittle & delicate but not greasy.
1) Are there any signs, other than leaks, that your aquarium silicone has gone bad?
2) Do you think the lifespan recommendations are bogus or legit?
3) Would it be good practice for us to tear down our tanks once a decade, just to refresh the silicone?
Somewhere around the 9 year mark, the silicone items in my kitchen start to become extremely oily. They pick up tons of debris. No matter how well I wash the oil off, it just reappears the next time I go to use it. Within two years the item becomes extremely brittle and fails.
The age of the silicone items failing in my house is very close to the recommended 10-15 year lifespan for an aquarium. However, I have never experienced aquarium silicone getting oily and overly sticky. One of the LFS's I worked at had an ancient slate bottomed tank, the silicone was brittle & delicate but not greasy.
1) Are there any signs, other than leaks, that your aquarium silicone has gone bad?
2) Do you think the lifespan recommendations are bogus or legit?
3) Would it be good practice for us to tear down our tanks once a decade, just to refresh the silicone?
