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Unread 08/27/2009, 02:00 AM   #1
Tc269
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Angry Tank cracked!!

so my 90gl of 7 months cracked today. Well I have only had the tank for 7 months I bought it used so I dont know how old it really is. I want to know what causes a tank to crack. is there something wrong in my stand. i didnt make my own it was a standard pine wood stand. The stand seems level and the floor is level. Do tanks just get old? does it just randomly happen sometimes? Any help would be greatly apreciated. Need some help and guidence to help me get back on my feet and poss back into the hobby????


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Unread 08/27/2009, 02:04 AM   #2
evsalty
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Where is the crack exactly? Is it possible that something hit the glass either from inside or from outside? Usually a crack in the glass needs a stressor to initiate it.


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Unread 08/27/2009, 02:07 AM   #3
BuddhaKiss
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Did you make sure your tank was leveled before you set it up? An unleveled tank can put uneven pressure on the seams and cause a leak


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Unread 08/27/2009, 02:18 AM   #4
Tc269
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the crack runs from the bottom right corner to about 4 inches to the left and to the top of the tank. and I did check the tank was level, I even rechecked the stand to make sure that was level.


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Unread 08/27/2009, 03:39 AM   #5
Tc269
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the tank is a aqueon by AGA mega flow Reef ready,


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Unread 08/27/2009, 01:44 PM   #6
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bump if anyone else has ideas


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Unread 08/27/2009, 02:10 PM   #7
JonnyD91
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Can you take a picture to give us a visual?


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Unread 08/27/2009, 03:20 PM   #8
Tc269
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heres the crack


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Unread 08/27/2009, 03:31 PM   #9
jlemoine2
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I'm guessing that most cracks are the result of a poor stand or some sort of material defect. Maybe just one corner of the tank was not quite rested properly on the stand. The entire tank and stand may have been level, but that does not mean it was evenly supported by the stand... if that makes sense.


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Unread 08/27/2009, 03:31 PM   #10
hawkfishman
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glass sucks


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Unread 08/27/2009, 03:52 PM   #11
JonnyD91
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Can you slide a piece of cardboard between the base of the tank and the top of the stand over in that corner? A thin pice of cardboard. Does the tank tieter todder(sp) on the stand? Are the visible gaps between the base of the tank and the stand more than 1/16"? Take some pics of where the tanks meets the stand lets see that.


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Unread 08/27/2009, 04:32 PM   #12
CBehr
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I have used 15 year old tanks so I would agree it's most likely the stand.


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Unread 08/27/2009, 05:13 PM   #13
Tc269
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Quote:
Originally posted by JonnyD91
Can you slide a piece of cardboard between the base of the tank and the top of the stand over in that corner? A thin pice of cardboard. Does the tank tieter todder(sp) on the stand? Are the visible gaps between the base of the tank and the stand more than 1/16"? Take some pics of where the tanks meets the stand lets see that.
Ok ill get some pics when I am done with work already got a thin peice of cardboard for testing it out. if this is my problem will i be able to just lay down a new board on top of my stand to even it all out like some partical board or something?? thanks again everone for your help


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Unread 08/27/2009, 05:46 PM   #14
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Your problem doesn't need to be the back corner. It could be the front corner is too high or too low.

Without the water in it, it will be hard to tell. But if it had water in it on the stand you could carefully feel the crack to see if the gap was inside or outside telling you if it was pushed back or pulled forward. Would have to be done in the same spot to test it. But your tank definitely twisted.

There was force either pushing the top corner or pulling foward on the top corner. Thus the reason the way it cracked.

Was it full of water when this happened?

Or quite possibly was let down with a little less care on that corner, started a run and it finally went when messing with it.

Nothing wrong with glass Hawk. Millions possibly billions of tanks sold without fail. But EVERY acrylic tank scratches and oxidizes.


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Unread 08/27/2009, 06:02 PM   #15
Tc269
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Quote:
Originally posted by ddinox64
Your problem doesn't need to be the back corner. It could be the front corner is too high or too low.

Without the water in it, it will be hard to tell. But if it had water in it on the stand you could carefully feel the crack to see if the gap was inside or outside telling you if it was pushed back or pulled forward. Would have to be done in the same spot to test it. But your tank definitely twisted.

There was force either pushing the top corner or pulling foward on the top corner. Thus the reason the way it cracked.

Was it full of water when this happened?

Or quite possibly was let down with a little less care on that corner, started a run and it finally went when messing with it.

Nothing wrong with glass Hawk. Millions possibly billions of tanks sold without fail. But EVERY acrylic tank scratches and oxidizes.
it was full of water when it happend and full of live stock.. I have had it up and running for 8 months now and i have changed nothing recently


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Unread 08/27/2009, 10:38 PM   #16
ddinox64
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Bummer. 48" long? Find the same length level to span the entire length of the stand. Torpedo won't work.


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Unread 08/27/2009, 10:46 PM   #17
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Many tanks at my local fish stores have cracked. Rock, water, whatever. Go to acrylic. More care involved, but a lot less likely to flood your house. My local fish stores have. Thanks


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Unread 08/27/2009, 11:07 PM   #18
danreefman
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you can repair a floor in a week. but what if your tank was runing for 5 years and you lost all that precious live stock


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Unread 08/27/2009, 11:43 PM   #19
Tc269
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oh just so there is no confusion a couple of people thought the bottom cracked and that is why they said stand.. for clarification the back wall of the tank cracked. is it still the possibily of it being the stand if its the back wall??


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Unread 08/28/2009, 10:14 AM   #20
jlemoine2
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I'm not sure if acrylic is less likely to flood your house or not. Most of the horror stories I read on Reef Central are due to seams splitting on acrylic tanks, but that is only from my observations.


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Unread 08/28/2009, 11:18 AM   #21
noahm
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Acrylic is far less likely to fail than glass unless it was a poor DIY or bad builder. A properly seamed and braced acrylic is extremely unlikely to fail. The general recommendation is go acrylic if it is going to be more than 55g as the safety factor outweighs the cleaning and scratching trouble that actually is pretty minimal. Glass on a large tank is fine, but you do have to make sure everything is stress free. You may start out with a perfectly straight and level stand/tank, but all that weight can cause settling. Even a semi driving up the street may get the floor resonating enough to cause a twist stress which will do exactly what your tank did. It is the sides and back that resist the up and down stresses, so they are the ones that usually fail when the stand/floor is uneven.


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Unread 08/28/2009, 12:35 PM   #22
James77
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Quote:
Originally posted by noahm
Acrylic is far less likely to fail than glass unless it was a poor DIY or bad builder. A properly seamed and braced acrylic is extremely unlikely to fail. The general recommendation is go acrylic if it is going to be more than 55g as the safety factor outweighs the cleaning and scratching trouble that actually is pretty minimal.
A properly built and supported glass tank is also extremely unlikely to fail. There are FAR more glass aquaria than acrylic, and these cracked tanks are very rare.

Most of the posts Ive read about acrylic scratching peg it at a serious PITA. Where are you getting the 55 gallon and above is better for acrylic, Ive never heard that. Ive heard on VERY large tanks it can be a better choice simply because of the reduced weight.


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Unread 08/28/2009, 12:35 PM   #23
mukymuk
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Could be a lot of things. The tank could have be dropped on that corner at some time in the past causing a small defect that eventually caused the huge crack you have. Some small area on that one corner might not have been polished correctly when it was built. Who knows?

I've seen tanks stand for years with one side an inch higher than the other. Glass is hard to know.


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Unread 08/28/2009, 01:18 PM   #24
luther1200
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Quote:
Originally posted by noahm
Acrylic is far less likely to fail than glass unless it was a poor DIY or bad builder. A properly seamed and braced acrylic is extremely unlikely to fail. The general recommendation is go acrylic if it is going to be more than 55g as the safety factor outweighs the cleaning and scratching trouble that actually is pretty minimal. Glass on a large tank is fine, but you do have to make sure everything is stress free.



Acrylic is just as likely to fail if not more IMO. You say properly built and braced acrylic tank is extremely unlikely to fail and I agree, but the same could be said for glass. I would venture to say that its probably pretty even.


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Unread 08/28/2009, 02:13 PM   #25
Tc269
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I have taken a level to all sides of the top of the stand every angle. perfectly level. I am waiting for my new tank to come today and I am going to set it on top and see if there is any gap between the tank and the stand. Just got off the phone with a big supplier and they said 9 out of 10 problems with cracks come from some small chip or defect in the tank not the stand.


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