Clearview lid

JTL

New member
Made by Artfully Acrylic. Anyone have one? Nice but expensive. For my 100g it would be about $250 shipped.
 
I have one on my 120. They are nice, but I do not like the screen on the bottom. I have a lot of surface agitation in my tank and the wave will catch the screen and the surface tension of the water will hold it down. They are manufactured in one pass on a CNC router table. Putting the mesh on the bottom keeps them from having to flip them over and reset.

I actually have mine on upside down right now until I get a chance to reconfigure my pumps.

IMG_0673-L.jpg
 
Mark, how thick is the poly-carbonate? I wonder if I could get one made for less money. The material is kind of expensive, but the shipping is like $40.
 
Fairly sure it is 3/8", but not home to confirm. Was going to build it myself since the material is about half the cost of getting one from artfully acrylic, but once I figured in the cost of all the tooling I needed to build one it was not much of a cost savings for the risk of messing up the poly carb.

Oh and IMO the lock for the feed door is not worth the extra cost. I found it to be an inconvenience and took it off.
 
I really don't like tank covers but without one my choice of nice looking fish is limited. I built a couple of them in the past, one out of aluminum window screen material like the typical diy ones and it was flimsy and ugly. Then I tried to make one out of some strips of acrylic, that was better but I had to glue the screening material onto the acrylic frame and that was not great.
 
The material is 3/8" thick and the flange is 2" wide. I have about 1/16" clear in both the length and width so it sits down a little. The tabs that hold it up are 1/16" thick.
 
Thanks. Thinking about making one out of strips of polycarb. I would need to glue the ends with Weldon 16 and cut the groove with my dremel. Under $100 but not as nice as the Artfully Arcrlic.
 
I have one on my 120. They are nice, but I do not like the screen on the bottom. I have a lot of surface agitation in my tank and the wave will catch the screen and the surface tension of the water will hold it down. They are manufactured in one pass on a CNC router table. Putting the mesh on the bottom keeps them from having to flip them over and reset.

I actually have mine on upside down right now until I get a chance to reconfigure my pumps.

I have one of their screen tops too. (Actually I have 2 of their tops.)
The first one came and at first I was happy. But after looking at it I noticed the screen material seemed pretty crooked.
Then one morning a few days later I noticed the left side of the screen material had sagged/caught in a ripple and was in the water.
I wasn't happy with this at all.
I sent them pictures and after a few back and forth emails they agreed to send me a new one.


They said one reason my screen was in the water was my abnormally high water level.
( none of my diy screen tops ever sagged)

The new seems to be better.
All in all I'm happy.
Their customer service is outstanding IMO.
 
I bet the screening material is difficult to get both tight and straight, especially it they use the type with 1/4" holes. Wazzel mentioned that they should put the groove for the spline on the top to minimize the sagging. They probably think it looks better on the bottom.

If I build one it won't look as refined because it will be constructed of 2" wide strips of poly-carbonate that will need to be joined at the corners. I calculated that I can build the top for about $70.
 
I bet the screening material is difficult to get both tight and straight, especially it they use the type with 1/4" holes. Wazzel mentioned that they should put the groove for the spline on the top to minimize the sagging. They probably think it looks better on the bottom.

If I build one it won't look as refined because it will be constructed of 2" wide strips of poly-carbonate that will need to be joined at the corners. I calculated that I can build the top for about $70.

I suspect it is totally for manufacturing reasons. As it is now they can cut the entire lid without flipping. It saves time and potential mistakes from not being properly aligned after the flip.
 
Thanks. Thinking about making one out of strips of polycarb. I would need to glue the ends with Weldon 16 and cut the groove with my dremel. Under $100 but not as nice as the Artfully Arcrlic.


I did this exact same thing. Works fine and doesn't look too bad.
 

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Need to decide on what spline to use since there are a few to choose from. Either a regular slot or dove tail slot the same or one size smaller is what I would use. Using a dremel should not be an issue.
 
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