So I am picking up a "new to me" used 125g tank a friend turned into a sump. He has a Red Sea tank in his shop we've been discussing for about the last 3 weeks. It was a front seam failure issue, he got the tank for free and is going to reseal and euro brace the tank.
One of the first things I noticed is something I had speculated about a lot, the front panel was kind of thin and it flexed, Tempered Glass does this. The next thing I noticed, or rather Nick noticed was that the silicone seemed thick, so we measured it and sure enough it was 3/16th thick when it should have been 1/8th. Thicker silicone would allow for more flex in the viewing panel right about the center of the tank!! More flex allows the water pressure to stretch the silicone farther, pushing it closer to it's breaking point. And eventually that is what has happened in a lot of these tanks. I am not sure if the RS is a g1 or g2, I'll find out today when I'm at his shop. and update this when I return.
Also I am not a Structural Engineer by any means but I think I do have a pretty good understanding of those things. I know un-tempered glass does not flex nearly as much as tempered and to support the same weight has to be thicker. This is why those old oceanics like my 300g have a 3/4inch bottom and 5/8th thick sides and front/back.
RS Makes a lot of tanks. They Mass Produce, so cost of materials is very important to them. using tempered they can use thinner glass which costs less, or it should. However I think they went to thin on several sizes and the result is all the broken seam issues we see here on R2R.
One of the first things I noticed is something I had speculated about a lot, the front panel was kind of thin and it flexed, Tempered Glass does this. The next thing I noticed, or rather Nick noticed was that the silicone seemed thick, so we measured it and sure enough it was 3/16th thick when it should have been 1/8th. Thicker silicone would allow for more flex in the viewing panel right about the center of the tank!! More flex allows the water pressure to stretch the silicone farther, pushing it closer to it's breaking point. And eventually that is what has happened in a lot of these tanks. I am not sure if the RS is a g1 or g2, I'll find out today when I'm at his shop. and update this when I return.
Also I am not a Structural Engineer by any means but I think I do have a pretty good understanding of those things. I know un-tempered glass does not flex nearly as much as tempered and to support the same weight has to be thicker. This is why those old oceanics like my 300g have a 3/4inch bottom and 5/8th thick sides and front/back.
RS Makes a lot of tanks. They Mass Produce, so cost of materials is very important to them. using tempered they can use thinner glass which costs less, or it should. However I think they went to thin on several sizes and the result is all the broken seam issues we see here on R2R.




