wooden_reefer
New member
I have a blue background 180 gal 8 foot acrylic tank. It was used as the sump to a 300 gal acrylic display tank. I have both. The acrylic thickness is half-inch for both.
The previous owner drilled holes of various sizes bulkheads on both tanks, the smaller tank into the front clear front (very wasteful). This is absolutely unacceptable and has to be fixed. I hope to patch up resulting in as little distortion as possible. I will use a smaller sump (a 80-100 gal of epoxy plywood or glass tank for sump) for the 300 gal tank and use this old sump as another display tank.
For the 300 gal tank there are too many holes but of course were drilled at the back. The owner drilled 3 inch holes for combined circulation. I believe that for filtration the flow need not be as high as for internal circulation, and to save energy the two flows should be separate. So I want to patch up excessive holes.
These holes are 1.5 to 3 inches diameter.
I want to use use weld-on 4 and/or weld-on 16. I have a stroll saw so I plan to cut disks of the correct size, from a sheet of 1/2 in thick acrylic. may be the disks should be very slightly tapered. I may tilt the scroll saw table 1-2 degrees.
I am thinking the weld-on 16 can be too thick (viscous) and weld-on 4 can be too thin. So may be a mixture of two would be the best. Or would weld-on 16 alone will seep through the cervices and gaps, provided that the disk is no more than 1/32 smaller than the hole?
If you have done this before and have insight please help.
Thank You
The previous owner drilled holes of various sizes bulkheads on both tanks, the smaller tank into the front clear front (very wasteful). This is absolutely unacceptable and has to be fixed. I hope to patch up resulting in as little distortion as possible. I will use a smaller sump (a 80-100 gal of epoxy plywood or glass tank for sump) for the 300 gal tank and use this old sump as another display tank.
For the 300 gal tank there are too many holes but of course were drilled at the back. The owner drilled 3 inch holes for combined circulation. I believe that for filtration the flow need not be as high as for internal circulation, and to save energy the two flows should be separate. So I want to patch up excessive holes.
These holes are 1.5 to 3 inches diameter.
I want to use use weld-on 4 and/or weld-on 16. I have a stroll saw so I plan to cut disks of the correct size, from a sheet of 1/2 in thick acrylic. may be the disks should be very slightly tapered. I may tilt the scroll saw table 1-2 degrees.
I am thinking the weld-on 16 can be too thick (viscous) and weld-on 4 can be too thin. So may be a mixture of two would be the best. Or would weld-on 16 alone will seep through the cervices and gaps, provided that the disk is no more than 1/32 smaller than the hole?
If you have done this before and have insight please help.
Thank You