Euro-bracing with or without center brace?

adamwheel

New member
I see a lot of euro-braced tanks built with and without a center brace.

I have a 66"x26"x24" (178 gal) height that I've built with 12mm and euro-braced with the same using 3" strips on top and bottom. I have a 4" piece already cut for a top center brace but is it necessary?

Rtv 108 or SCS 1200 on everything I've done btw.

As always, thanks and cheers,

Adam
 
24" height and 26" front to back (depth) euro-bracing on top and bottom and c2c overflow 1.5" down from top.

Hope this clears up any confusion.
 
12mm seems really, really, thin! I'm not a tank builder so maybe one of them will chime in here but I would say absolutely install the center brace, you might even need two (leaving three tank openings) with 66" x 24" front and back panels and glass that thin.
 
I see a lot of euro-braced tanks built with and without a center brace.

I have a 66"x26"x24" (178 gal) height that I've built with 12mm and euro-braced with the same using 3" strips on top and bottom. I have a 4" piece already cut for a top center brace but is it necessary?

Rtv 108 or SCS 1200 on everything I've done btw.

As always, thanks and cheers,

Adam

I would strongly suggest a center brace. The tank you have there is not made from thick enough glass; having a safety factor of 3.41, it should have a full metal rim rather than euro-bracing. The minimum safety factor
for a full metal rimmed tank is 3.8. For euro-bracing you want a safety factor of ~ 4 - 5.

Using good silicone is a good idea, but depending on experience, it may or may not help much.
 
I would strongly suggest a center brace. The tank you have there is not made from thick enough glass; having a safety factor of 3.41, it should have a full metal rim rather than euro-bracing. The minimum safety factor
for a full metal rimmed tank is 3.8. For euro-bracing you want a safety factor of ~ 4 - 5.

Using good silicone is a good idea, but depending on experience, it may or may not help much.

How do you calculate a safety factor? Higher is better?
edit: nevermind, I read some of your other thread responses about engineering guides... I will keep researching.
 
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