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#101 | |
Registered Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Edge of oblivion
Posts: 1,708
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Quote:
There is no point to prove. The choice between glass and acrylic is a personal one based on the situation and personal opinion. Each has pros and cons. Picking one or the other doesn't make you smarter, more detail oriented, or tougher. The only exception to this is that people who choose glass tanks are sexier. True story.
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"Froth at the top, dregs at bottom, but the middle excellent." -- Voltaire Current Tank Info: getting back into the hobby |
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#102 |
Premium Member
![]() Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: State of Jefferson
Posts: 345
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I was always told that people that choose acrylic tanks are sexier! hmmm?
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120 FOWLR. Equip: 80gal Plywood/pondliner basement sump, Ebay LED light fixture, Euroreef 5-3, mag 18 return (looking at making this a backup), 2 tunze 6100 with multi-controller |
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#103 | |
Team RC Member
![]() Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: Rochester, NY
Posts: 41,560
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Quote:
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over 24 years experience with multiple types of marine aquarium systems *see Upstate Reef Society Forum on RC and FB* GOOGLE JUNIOR'S REEF Current Tank Info: 84x24x30 265g reef past TOTM honors |
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#104 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Titusville, FL
Posts: 3,227
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All my tanks are glass, and I have to admit I am quite the lady's man...
...then again all my super model girlfriends went acrylic.
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The ocean is the pinnacle of reef tanks. Someone up there is keeping up with his PH and Phosphates to. |
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#105 |
Moved On
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: bloomington, il
Posts: 2,246
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fwiw, i use a standard acrylic-safe mag float to clean my acrylic tank daily or every other day. never have had coralline start. it's just become a part of my daily routine...along with adjusting the beckett skimmer and feeding. takes 5 minutes at the most, and that's 5 minutes i get to spend observing the tank pretty close up. do something 14 days in a row and it will become habitual. try it.
![]() i have found that a gift certificate credit card (no signature = no ink) works great for removing coraline that has started on the acrylic displays at the store i work at. still, my next tank will definately be starfire. i have an old acrylic tank (probably 15 years old or better) and can confirm that while acrylic seams may not need resealed, crazing in the acrylic does start to appear over time. to me it's more frustrating than scratches because you can't buff it out. it's embedded in the acrylic itself. so no, imo acrylic tanks don't last "forever". |
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#106 | |
Registered Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Edge of oblivion
Posts: 1,708
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Quote:
Game. Set. Match. ![]() wow, we're silly
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"Froth at the top, dregs at bottom, but the middle excellent." -- Voltaire Current Tank Info: getting back into the hobby |
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#107 |
Premium Member
![]() Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: State of Jefferson
Posts: 345
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hyperfocal - supermodels don't do silicon. that is why they are super.
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120 FOWLR. Equip: 80gal Plywood/pondliner basement sump, Ebay LED light fixture, Euroreef 5-3, mag 18 return (looking at making this a backup), 2 tunze 6100 with multi-controller |
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#108 |
Premium Member
![]() Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Newberg, Oregon
Posts: 364
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Wow...I inherited the 55 gal acrylic so it cost me nada. It is easy enough to keep clean and the previous scratches buffed out with a little elbow grease. A recent scratch buffed out easy as well. I was able to drill it on my own and I know that the seams are welded, not siliconed. It seems easier to get a "custom" tank with acrylic for the money.
I personally, like mine.
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Pacific North West Marine Aquarium Society (PNWMAS)-Secretary Kris Waters Current Tank Info: 110 gallon tall |
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#109 | |
Registered Member
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: South Florida
Posts: 1,936
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The little short-handled scraper works fine for coraline on the upper parts of my tank...but its 36" deep, and I have trouble getting enough pressure applied with the long-handled version so I can't get the area by the sand bed (which adds to the problem!) clean enough.
I've really only had one major mishap, and yes, I was being careless, but that happens with humans. More than the actual scratches though, its all the pain I have to go through to try to clean it (and not do a good job) because of the fear of scratches. What I wouldn't give to be able to put a razor blade on that long-handled scraper and just go at it! Canarygirl, I suppose it may be crazing like you've described. I can't see any bowing, other than the fact that its a bowfront already. jds Quote:
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#110 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 2,006
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acrylic seems to scarach much easer and its really had to get coroline off the glass
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I have never been one for guidelines Current Tank Info: 20g Turtle Tank and 58g OC Ultimate Reef :) |
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#111 |
Premium Member
![]() Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: State of Jefferson
Posts: 345
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Is it true that on a properly built tank, you will not see crazing? I thought crazing happpened over time due to deflection. A properly built tank will have zero (or very little deflection), thus no crazing.
From what I understand many acrylic tanks are underbuilt to save on costs.
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120 FOWLR. Equip: 80gal Plywood/pondliner basement sump, Ebay LED light fixture, Euroreef 5-3, mag 18 return (looking at making this a backup), 2 tunze 6100 with multi-controller |
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#112 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Christiansburg, VA
Posts: 4,893
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after having microfractures appear overnight all over the front pane of my 3x3 glasscages tank, i'm gonna overbuild my next one myself out of acrylic.
![]() the insulation is a plus for me, i've always spent way more money and effort keeping my tanks warm than cool. |
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#113 |
100-mile-commuter
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: almost nevada
Posts: 4,721
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manderx,
Yikes, never seen that before. How old is the tank? Whats the thickness of that pane? Acrylic does craze as well.
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Custom electronics purveyor. blueAcro.com Current Tank Info: 90g SPS+mixed reef (10 yrs): LEDBrick LEDs, 40g custom sump, Ca reactor, chiller, Vortech, lots of custom electronics |
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#114 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Christiansburg, VA
Posts: 4,893
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it's been set up for only about a year. it's 1/2" glass, 36x36x20 rimless. it also has a 3"x3" chip halfway down on the inside one of the front seams that appeared a few days after filling, but it ran itself out with no chance of running back into the glass so it never bothered me. i think they were a bit rough with it while assembling it. might also have something to do with being rimless, but i've seen bigger rimless tanks with 1/2" glass, so who knows. my stand is just cinder blocks with a double layer of glued and screwed plywood + foam. perfectly flat and level.
not trying to imply that everyone should do acrylic just because my glass tank scares me. actually the biggest reason i want to do acrylic is because i feel like i can get fancier with it, make it look sharper, solid black back and bottom, with a sexier external overflow and stuff like that. |
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