Hey guys so I have bought an overflow box for my 75 gallon. The problem is my aquarium is fully setup with water coral the whole 9 yards. How do I glue it underwater to the glass? It’s acrylic so it’s going to be difficult to glue to.
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It’s full of live rock water sand corals clownfish watchman goby snowflake eel two mollys coral beauty puffer fish. It’s completely established.What's in there now?
Marine epoxy maybe... It's not something I would do with the tank full myself
Replacing an old one. So the only way to glue is with the tank drained?Is it replacing an existing overflow? Are you going to drill a new hole? Just curious I suppose as it doesn't pertain to gluing... I would do as suggested above tho
Ah. I don't know but I know what it takes to do it dry I can't imagine doing it in a running systemReplacing an old one. So the only way to glue is with the tank drained?
I take it you and Chuck still aren't talking.Replacing an old one. So the only way to glue is with the tank drained?
I didn’t even think to rinse it that was my problem. I added some carbon and some seagel to try and help. How long do you think it will take for the water to be healthy?that's a bummer. Too late to suggest you rinse the sand really good before putting it back in. No telling how long it will take to be "safe" from where I'm sitting. Sorry about this. If you can make new water it , rinse the sand with fresh water to remove all the funk and then add new water and it should be fine. A carbon filter might help.
Sorry.
Agree! This is the safest!You've probably stirred up a lot of nasty stuff in that sandbed. Safest bet is to dump all that sand and water out; don't risk it.
I have a diatomacious earth filter and a Hang On Tank Magnum (~20 year old Hot magnum a buddy gave me and the last VOrtex filter ever made and sold new) that I throw on a tank when things like this happen. They could probably get the water visually cleaned up in a couple of hours but not knowing what was in the sandbed it is a wild guess how long it might take with just a skimmer and socks working? The reason folk are suggesting a water change and rinsing the sand by removing it from the tank and "rip cleaning" it until it makes no dust or dirt flying around when it goes back in is that both actions remove the accumulated funk from the tank so they are not in the equation for health vs. water quality that is unknown to all of us at this time. If it has settled in the tank it will likely form a film that gets remobilized into a cloud when a fish swims by. Need to remove that. In the wild, storm surge sweeps it into the depths or into the dirty side of the lagoon where not much grows that looks like hard coral.I didn’t even think to rinse it that was my problem. I added some carbon and some seagel to try and help. How long do you think it will take for the water to be healthy?