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12/17/2007, 01:25 PM | #1 |
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210 Gallons all over the floor - Help with leveling stand
Long story short
210G (72X24X29) Tank made by AGA 1st tank - After water & LR added small chip/crack formed on one corner. 2nd tank - Replacement was damaged under the black trim 3rd tank - Tank flooded my garage/viewing room yesterday in about 20minutes. Bad luck or what!! Luckily I was able to save all my fish / corals. My original thought has been the level of my DIY stand. Although when tank was placed on top of stand, I added water & it was level to the bone. Other thought was just bad defective AGA tanks. I am currently waiting for a AGA representative to call me regarding this mis-hap. In the meanwhile to be 100% certain that the stand is level I was wondering if anybody here used self leveling cement? Particularly made by Mapei (sold at Lowe's) http://www.mapei.it/Referenze/Multi...ratop_TD_EA.pdf http://www.mapei.it/Referenze/Multi...nEasy_TD_EA.pdf http://www.mapei.it/Referenze/Multi...ratop_TD_EA.pdf I want to add about 1/2" to the top of my stand to perfectly level things out. |
12/17/2007, 02:11 PM | #2 |
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I think even if the tank wasn't level, it should still hold fine. I'd be suing if it was me.
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It's time for operation crazy-plan Current Tank Info: Drilled 55g, 14g sump, coralife 125 SS: mated pair of b&w misbar clowns, ywg |
12/17/2007, 02:14 PM | #3 |
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That kind of weight on the top of a stand will crack and probably cause bigger problems. When the weight of the aquarium hits that concrete the stress will break concrete that thin. If anything make a 4"-6" slab under the stand and make sure that the stand is square and level.
Easier solution - buy a different brand, if I had three failures I'd be looking elsewhere.
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Put Wings on it and Let it Fly!!! PBITAWA !!! Current Tank Info: 180 Cube 3x3x3. 29Gallon Sump 20 Gallon Fuge (1) Lumenarc Reflector w. 250W ARO Ballast and - Modded GS1 Skimmer - Eheim 1262 Return - Vortech MP40W and Swirler Stein |
12/17/2007, 02:15 PM | #4 |
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Can you be more detailed with the breaks? Were they all similar or vastly different?
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12/17/2007, 02:17 PM | #5 |
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I'd hate to say it, but at this point I'd probably go acrylic if it were me.
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12/17/2007, 02:42 PM | #6 | |
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Quote:
On the original topic, I feel for you. And I'm sure the worst part is not knowing whether it's the brand your using or your own human error, oh yeah, that and losing your 3rd setup. I have an AGA and have never had any structural problems, but working in the fish store, I saw a number of unsatisfied customers, often with the same problems as yourself. |
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12/17/2007, 02:49 PM | #7 |
It's what it's
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I was under the impression that AGA will only guarantee the tanks if they are on an AGA stand that was built for that tank. I could be wrong though.
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Freed Current Tank Info: 180gal(1120 watts of MH/VHO light), 60gal "sump", Deltec 601 calcium reactor, Euro Reef CS8-3+ skimmer, 20 gallon QT |
12/17/2007, 02:56 PM | #8 |
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If your tank is not evenly supported under the tank you can create stress on different parts of the glass or the silicone. Also, if your rock is placed directly on the glass you can create stress points on the glass by points on the rock touching the glass. Don't know if either of these are your issues, but just my thoughts.
To level my tank I first leveled the stand. My final step was to glue (liquid nails) a 1/4 inch sheet of Luan (finished plywood) to the top of the stand. I then immediately put the tank on top of the luan and let dry for several days. I figured this would give me a good evenly distributed pressure along the entire edge of the bottom of the tank. To keep my rocks from having small pressure points on the glass I put plumbers epoxy at 3 different points on the bottom of each rock that rested on the glass. Lay the rock on a flat surface so it creates 3 nice flat surfaces for the rock to rest on the glass and let harden. The epoxy I used is sold at HD for about $7 and is in a tube about 8 inches long. You break off a piece and mix it in your hand for several minutes, place on the rock and it hardens within less than 10 minuts. Coraline grows very fast on the epoxy. Good luck. Scott
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Scott 100 gallon BB tank, SPS, LPS, (2) - 250W MH 14000K, 80W actinic supplement, 30 gal sump, counter current skimmer, 5000gal/hr, ro/di water topoff....60 gal fuge, 440W VHO, 950gal/hr |
12/17/2007, 03:32 PM | #9 | |
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Quote:
Im pretty sure thats how it goes with all the tank. At least that is the policy where I work. Warranty only counts if the tank is on a stand made by the same manufacturer.
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Couple SPS/Zoanthid tanks and a couple of FW planted tanks. Current Tank Info: 5 pieces of glass with some silicone and plastic frames holding them together |
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12/17/2007, 03:36 PM | #10 |
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yikes. good luck
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12/17/2007, 03:50 PM | #11 |
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Man, I hope it all works out for you 210gallons of water is a lot on floor. I would probably look at your stand, I cannot imagine you had 3 bad tanks in a row.
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Out of the hobby, but thinking of rejoining Current Tank Info: 92 Reef, 10 Reef |
12/17/2007, 07:47 PM | #12 | |
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Quote:
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219"x30"x48" - 1350gl reef Current Tank Info: ...18ft of double sided goodness |
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12/17/2007, 08:12 PM | #13 |
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I used leveling cement under a tank recently. Actually the contractor used it. came out pretty nice. this is under an in wall 270 gallon tank. That leveling cement is actually pretty cool, its sort of rubberized.
Last edited by wakesetter; 12/17/2007 at 08:18 PM. |
12/17/2007, 09:32 PM | #14 |
Hi
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I've always heard that if one has a flawand is gonna go, it will do it the first day when you first fill it.
Have you tried a non-drilled with tempered glass maybe?
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Red Sea Max 130d and 125 gallon mixed reef. Current Tank Info: 125 gallon oceanic tank, Lighthouse Pro XLS, 72" outer orbit fixture, H&S 150-F2000/1 skimmer, H&S 110 Calcium Reactor, Tunze 7096, 2 Tunze 6105's , Tunze Osmolator, Prime 1/4hp drop-in chiller. 5 years running. Red Sea Max, 3 years. |
12/17/2007, 11:09 PM | #15 |
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Thanks for all the feedbacks & suggestions
AGA does warranty their tanks even if it is not their stand you are using. I talked with a technical support guy from AGA & he said it might be a temperature issue since this is an inwall setup. Viewing room is always 65-72 degrees while the garage/back side is anywhere from 50-60 degrees. He said that the glass can contract & since their is a variance in temp it could have caused the tank to give at one of the bottom front seems. He said that they have never tested it but it could be the root cause, kinda sounds believable if glass really contracts? Sound like BS to me but what do I know. He also said that it could be a humidity issue in the garage & it could have caused the stand to warp. I doubt this since it has not been setup long enough to have caused it to warp. They are offering me store credit from the LFS if I wanted, but i am still weighing out my options. I doubt it is the level of the stand, if it is off it would not be more then an 1/8 " & I dont't think it would cause it to cause a problem. I was thinking it could have been a pressure point on the bottom of the glass as "sterbrock1" mentioned. Since I have a shallow sand bed 1/2" & about 250pounds of Lr. But if it were it would have cracked at 1 point & shattered the whole bottom pane, since it is a tempered piece of glass. Still thinking of my options & time will tell to give it up or try again. Wifey wants no part of it anymore |
12/17/2007, 11:44 PM | #16 |
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I'd get my money back. I don't believe a word he says. If that was the case, they would have many more cases and would put a disclaimer on it. Do you see any other type of glass crack in those temps? Exactly.
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12/18/2007, 01:15 AM | #17 |
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I am no expert but in my mind a tank that is not level, but well built, will NOT break immediately. The pressure works on the seams through time and eventually it might tear it apart. But if it tears apart immediately then the tank was not build right.
I did not see from your replies - but did the seam pop or did the glass crack? |
12/18/2007, 03:07 AM | #18 |
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un-evenness in the stand(whether level or not) could put a pressure point at the high spot.
after 3 tanks, I personally would suspect I am doing something wrong.
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Only Dead fish swim with the current. Current Tank Info: 2 50 gal tanks, sump, still BB |
12/18/2007, 07:48 AM | #19 |
Moved On
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Why wonder? Put a straightedge on the stand and see if it has high or low spots. Being slightly out of level, won't hurt the tank, but it can effect your overflows.
IF the stand is straight, then it has to be another problem. |
12/18/2007, 11:35 AM | #20 |
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I have heard of people placing a relatively thin sheet of styrofoam between the rank and the stand to eliminate any irregularities in the stand surface. Never tried it myself.
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If all you have is a hammer, then everything looks like a nail |
12/18/2007, 12:13 PM | #21 |
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jay24k - I'm with you I didn't believe what he said sounded like BS
Mr31415 - I believe that the seams were defective, since they went out in less then 6 weeks. Frick-n-Frags - "un-evenness in the stand(whether level or not) could put a pressure point at the high spot." Can you please elaborate on this? This makes kinda makes sense. It very well could be that the stand is not perfect but leveling out when water is in tank. BTW it's really only 2 tanks I've had. 1st was defective with a chip that got bigger as i added weight. 2nd was damaged before even putting on stand. 3rd is I don't know what's wrong yet. samtheman - I've tried many different straightedges with all being level. I'm at the point where I am considering going acrylic, I got one quoted for about $1200 ouch!! & have to be worried about how easily it scratches. But for this size tank I'd rather have scratches then 200+ gallons on the floor again. I just don't think glass tanks are safe anymore, at least when over 200 gallons. |
12/18/2007, 12:23 PM | #22 |
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Is it possible your stand is somewhat twisted? You could theoretically have all four edges straight as an edge, but the middle might be twisted. Hope I'm not confusing you.
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12/18/2007, 12:27 PM | #23 |
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makes kinda sense, but how would it get twisted? Humidity?
The stand has been up only for 3 months & was painted with oil based paint. Now that it has been wet, I'd believe that it could get twisted. |
12/18/2007, 12:47 PM | #24 |
Moved On
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Leveling is not the issue. If the difference is only an 1/8 in. then I guarantee leveling is not your problem. It's not humidity or temperature, that customer service guy had no clue. It's the tanks! Get them to replace it until it works flawlessly or take your money elsewhere.
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12/18/2007, 01:56 PM | #25 |
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this sucks...but it doesnt sound like BS to me..Cold contracts everything..even glass..sounds plausible to me.
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