James, since your talking PC, do you mind elaborating a little for me.
Ihave seen a few Sumps being made of this, and I like the looks of it.
Do you mind helping with the solvent question. You said any acrylic solvent will work, but will it hold structurally for a water holding container?
Yes and no. PC should be dried before gluing as the moisture content is so high - just tends to bubble. Drying is akin to annealing. long time, low heat, unmasked.. not practical for the most part.
Most fabricators use methylene chloride to glue PC as well as acrylic. However, tetrahydrafuran (THF) can also be use about as effectively as methylene chloride. THF is the primary ingredient in PVC pipe cement.
Weld-on 40/42 can also be used, but in any case; if you're going to be gluing for a tank - would strongly advise drying the material first.
That said, I can't say I've *ever* seen someone make a sump out of polycarbonate. I know it's been done, I've just never seen it and can't believe it would look any better than acrylic nor be nearly as strong.
And what's your opinion on strength verses acrylic? Would the same thickness of PC equal that of Acrylic? Or does it require thicker or thinner material?
Would need to be thicker to keep deflection down and for increased gluing surface as the bonds are not as strong as acrylic bonds. Since PC is softer, it will want to warp more with load.
Just as acrylic is softer than glass, PC is softer than acrylic. Adjust thicknesses accordingly.
And would you personally have a PC sump,or do you prefer AC and why?
No, I wouldn't. I can't think of a single good reason to use PC over acrylic for our applications, not one.
About storing sheets: I have always seen it stored flat. I assume this is to prevent warping. I know that any sheets I've stored leaning against the wall warp pretty quickly.
If I built a rack system that would hold sheets standing up on their long edge and held them tightly, would they still warp? I was thinking that I could take 2 sheets of 3/4" plywood and sandwiched them on either side of a bunch of sheets, then clamped them together, would this prevent warping?
it'll help but if the wood warps, so will the acrylic. And considering one side of the wood will be exposed - I would suspect it'll grow and become convex over time.
HTH,
James