Pm me and depending on your location I may have some other options.Would love to see some pictures of your work? Any chance you still would price one up for me?
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Pm me and depending on your location I may have some other options.Would love to see some pictures of your work? Any chance you still would price one up for me?
I have been very happy with my miracles custom tanks.
Fwiw maybe 10-15 years ago locally there was an acrylic trend here for large reef tanks. For those that are still in the club and being used every single person I talked with locally regrets getting acrylic for the scratching. Just what people have told me. No doubt plenty love them but that hasn't been what my local folks have experienced.
There is a downside to any product you use...like exploding glass panels...and scratched acrylic. Given that we have not developed transparent Aluminum yet we have to learn to accept imperfect materials and use them the best way we can.
Just lightly tapped my ADA glass tank on a counter edge while re-wrapping it for storage and guess what it chipped. Never would have touched my acrylic tanks or left a mark. So there are limits and neither glass or acrylic checks all the boxes for the best material.
The heavy part of glass is also an issue because always need an army of people to move a tank. I have 110 oceanic that weighs a ton, I also used to have 120 tenecor acrylic tank which I was able to carry easily with a friend. The 110 was a real challenge , so I can only imagine a 180 or 220 would be much much heavier.No doubt about that. Nothing is perfect. I will say I had my miracles rimless 120 built from 3/4" Starfire and with glass that think it seems like I could drop it off the roof and it would be fine, lol.
It's so heavy for a 4x2x2 tho... That part sucks.
The heavy part of glass is also an issue because always need an army of people to move a tank. I have 110 oceanic that weighs a ton, I also used to have 120 tenecor acrylic tank which I was able to carry easily with a friend. The 110 was a real challenge , so I can only imagine a 180 or 220 would be much much heavier.
The heavy part of glass is also an issue because always need an army of people to move a tank. I have 110 oceanic that weighs a ton, I also used to have 120 tenecor acrylic tank which I was able to carry easily with a friend. The 110 was a real challenge , so I can only imagine a 180 or 220 would be much much heavier.
Very true and excellent point, I definitely will be getting the stand from whoever makes the tank. Midwest custom aquariums has a lot of photos of nice stands they have built and stress the fact that their stands are built with correct bracingThis btw, brings up a point that's worth considering. With a 30" width, the stress modulus on any particular point on the bottom will be a good deal higher than with a narrower tank, whether acrylic or glass. So it may be well worth considering whether the particular manufacturer of the tank is a competent stand builder, and perhaps factor that into whichever builder you choose.
Check out Windrider Creations......QUOTE]
Now called http://acrylichabitats.com if you can't find them.
Sorry to be slow. Here are pix of the tanks/stands and some of the issues I have with them. CD would have taken the stands back to fix them, but then I would have had the tanks sitting in my living room for months, waiting for the stands to be repaired. I love the quality of the aquariums and the stands are not bad, but I waited nearly 6 months from ordering each time, when 12 weeks was quoted...Good information, do you have any pictures of both stands and styles, would like to see them and see the issues as well.
Not quite true. If you treat it like a car or a pair of glasses you won't scratch it. I had zero on a huge tank when I took care of it. But others sure they will scratch but in 17 years I have a tanks that still looks great yes some scratches from people not being careful. Like if you clean your car dry with sand it will scratch the paint. If you use water and soap you will scratch the paint far less. My glasses are 2 years old not one scratch, other people they ruin them quicky by dry wiping them with paper towel.I worked for a guy for almost 2 years that owns an Acrylic Tank manufacturing company, I can't suggest them so I won't say which, but I will say that I wouldn't believe everything you see in a video. I work full time in the industry and have been the president of 2 marine aquarium societies, still am the prez of one and I will tell you that I have never seen an acrylic tank that over a year old that is not scratched up beyond what could be repaired without distorting the view.