Conspiculatus
New member
Giovanni,
One option might be to use a round over router bit to remove the portion effected by crazing.
One option might be to use a round over router bit to remove the portion effected by crazing.
Once an edge is flame polished is there any way to add a brace or any other acrylic widget on to it? Maybe with weld on 40?
I'd think 3/4" should be fine for the sides with 1/8" max deflection.. at 60" span x 12" height - deflection is negligible, so I'd think 3/4" should suffice for yours. But 1" won't hurt at all, provides tons of piece of mind and IMO worth the extra $50 or so...James,
Bud has asked me to get your input on a tank that I'm currently quoting for a customer. I've done several searches in these threads and found tons of information but I'd like to know you opinion on a setup.
My customer wants a 48x18x10 rimless frag tank. This tank WILL be set up and used 24/7 as a coral display in his home. After finding some of your deflection estimates for similar spans I was thinking 1" sides with maybe 1/2" for the bottom panel. I asked Bud for his opinion and he said I could possibly need more than that and I should chase down your thoughts before I quote.
Thanks for any advice you can offer.
For me it's pretty simple; there is *nothing* that 16 can do that something else can't do *far* better... whether that something is Weld-on 40/42 or straight solvent.James, why do you say WO16 is garbage? I've used it several times and had great results, but your expertise in acrylic makes me wonder now.
I have a router and have a double upspiral acrylic bit from HD but when I make the cuts there are waves in the cut acrylic-there small but not smooth to weld. Any ideas?
I'm making a unique tank and need to but two pieces together for a flat seam joint. I've got the glueing part down with bubble free seems and a nearly perfect flat sheet but I'm having some issues with sanding down and polishing the excess material that oozes out. I've tried a small sanding block with 500 grit then moving up to 2000 in stages and finishing with a polisher. It's going ok to good but I get some minor distortion around the seam. I'm using a 1" wide sanding block to get just the seam, should I go bigger like a 3" wide area to cut down on distortion? How would you typically go about polishing out a seam like this?
Iammonster I found taking 500 grit wet dry sandpaper to the routered edges with a sanding block helped a lot. Not a lot of sanding just a few swipes like 10 seconds a foot of edge, it won't take out all of the ridges but it will take out the bigger ones without messing up your right angled router cut and greatly reduces the bubbles. Just be real careful to not round the edges. I'm using a 20 year old fixed router mounted to an aftermarket table with a level clamped on as a fence and a basic 5/8" carbide bit. It works for me with stuff I had just lying around.[/QUOT
Sanding should not have to be done when edge prepping with the router.
You should figure out why the router is not giving you a weld ready seam.
JMO