I generally use the panel saw, but can be done easily enough with a table saw and double faced tape.. just make sure your table is square. But the reality is that being perfectly square is not nearly as important as being consistent. Keep reference corners aligned and the tank will sit flatOne question, unrelated to the router table. This one has been dogging me for a while. Is there a particular trick to getting 2 edges square to each other? Short of taking a sheet to the local acrylic shop and having them cut it for me on a panel saw, how do you do this using a table saw and router table?
Depends on how you flow water through the tank. An internal box has 3 planes skimming the surface while an external only has one. But the one can do a great job if your flow scheme directs flow to it. Think of a barrel roll in the tank, water directed at the overflow..Thanks for all the help James!!!!
A little off topic, but are there any advantages as to running an external overflow on the back wall vs. An external overflow on 1 end of the tank? Also the tank would have dual external waveboxes as well....
I generally use the panel saw, but can be done easily enough with a table saw and double faced tape.. just make sure your table is square. But the reality is that being perfectly square is not nearly as important as being consistent. Keep reference corners aligned and the tank will sit flat![]()
No, but you can do it that way.Ah. Just to make sure I've got it, line up the edge you want to square in reference to along the front edge of the table itself, and check the right edge to see if it is indeed perpendicular by using the fence or the other edge of the table. Then if needed, double-face tape the other piece of acrylic on top so that piece's edge is perpendicular to the front edge of your working piece, and then cut through both pieces of acrylic.
Do I have that right?
:beer:Oh duh. Tape to the fence edge, cut the opposite edge. Gotcha.
Generally speaking; no, doesn't hurt, but doesn't necessarily help eitherJames curious about edge prep!!!! Does it hinder or hurt anything when you have your edges prepped to take 1200 grit wet/dry and give it a few swipes as long as you keep everything square?
16 *can* make it stick "okay" but 40 is a much better solution.In the below thread, I had asked about reconnecting the clear outer-portion of a collection cup to the white base.
http://reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2042666
Someone had suggested using Weld-on 16 or pvc cement. Could you compare/contrast the two cements for this?
Thanks,
Brian
16 *can* make it stick "okay" but 40 is a much better solution.
PVC pipe cement also can make it stick but Tetrahydrafuran (THF - the primary in PVC cement) does not glue acrylic at all - it only stresses the hell out of it. It can make it stick though, simply by the dissolved solids in the solvent. I wouldn't use it though unless it was in a pinch and absolutely necessary. The chance of crazing the acrylic is pretty high.
I don't know what the white base is made of, but if it's PVC - a PVC cement made primarily from MEK would be better than the hotter (THF) cements, as MEK will attack acrylic, just not well. Hope this makes sense.
James
No, WO 40 is an actual acrylic resin. Comes in a 2-part kit; a monomer and a catalyst. IMO it's the best solution for the task at handThanks for the quick response.
The white base is a hard PVC.
Sorry for my lack of knowledge, but is WELD-ON 40 Methyl Ethyl Ketone (MEK) based?
No, WO 40 is an actual acrylic resin. Comes in a 2-part kit; a monomer and a catalyst. IMO it's the best solution for the task at hand
MEK based solvents work, just not nearly as well for this application IMO.
James
No magic to it, I just use a 1.5-2" radius on most things and the radius goes up a little on tanks like yours. 2" rad would be fine but I'd probably opt for a 3-4" radius since there's no crossbracing.Hi James!!!! Curious as to how you go about determining the correct radius of the corners, when cutting your euro bracing. Using 1" thick material, and going with 8" euro bracing, trying to avoid any cross bracing.