Ok so my name is Eli, I have done multiple fresh water tanks before but never had done a saltwater tank. My friend Zack (Zswift) got me into the salt water hobby and it is crazy addicting. So about a month ago I started a small 16 gallon tank and a small 10 gallon sw tank, after getting fish and sand rock and all the good stuff I decided it was time to upgrade. I decided to do a coffee table tank. My compromise was a tank which sets on my small coffee table and will eventually have a glass top so it will act like the top of my table where I can set stuff on it and still look at it from the sides and top.
i set out to by the material. I got a sheet of acrylic; i believe it was 44in by 36 inches. i drew up my plans before i bought the material. I went home and with the help of my dad we cut the acrylic and glued it all up using aquarium safe silicone. we built a neat little wooden frame around the tank as i chose to us a thin acrylic (1/8 inch) I know it's too thin so don't ride me on it. Next tank i build i will use 1/4 inch, i learned my lesson. after the silicone was all dry i filled it with water and let it set (my second mistake was using salt water, i had "cleaned" the tank with fresh water first) about 30 minutes after it was full and i had already put the sand in it decided to spring a leak forcing me to drain it and store the water. i resealed it with the same silicone stuff and did the whole process. This time i was smart and used fresh water for the test and of course 30 minutes after it had been sitting it leaked. i tore this sucker down and stripped it of all the silicone. I than built the tank around the tank frame, trimming and sanding the acrylic so it would be perfectly square. This time i silicone it up with GE window and door silicone and let it dry, I filled it with water and let it sit. 30 minutes, 1 hour, 2 hours... no leaks. So I drained it and re-filled it and once again NO LEAKS
. I then put sw and my sand and rock in the tank and let it sit... NO LEAKS so far
i now have my few fish in the tank and it is doing fine
all I have to do now is build the lights!
the first photos are the first design, then what it looked like before it leaked then what it lookes like now. or should be, this is my first post
i set out to by the material. I got a sheet of acrylic; i believe it was 44in by 36 inches. i drew up my plans before i bought the material. I went home and with the help of my dad we cut the acrylic and glued it all up using aquarium safe silicone. we built a neat little wooden frame around the tank as i chose to us a thin acrylic (1/8 inch) I know it's too thin so don't ride me on it. Next tank i build i will use 1/4 inch, i learned my lesson. after the silicone was all dry i filled it with water and let it set (my second mistake was using salt water, i had "cleaned" the tank with fresh water first) about 30 minutes after it was full and i had already put the sand in it decided to spring a leak forcing me to drain it and store the water. i resealed it with the same silicone stuff and did the whole process. This time i was smart and used fresh water for the test and of course 30 minutes after it had been sitting it leaked. i tore this sucker down and stripped it of all the silicone. I than built the tank around the tank frame, trimming and sanding the acrylic so it would be perfectly square. This time i silicone it up with GE window and door silicone and let it dry, I filled it with water and let it sit. 30 minutes, 1 hour, 2 hours... no leaks. So I drained it and re-filled it and once again NO LEAKS
the first photos are the first design, then what it looked like before it leaked then what it lookes like now. or should be, this is my first post