Ok, so after practicing my silicone application I have my movements down well and was able to get smooth lines and uninterrupted corners. I had the back pannel and two sides up under 5 minutes
After I put it all together and clamped the corners I was kicked in the gut when I saw that the front pannel had a large air pocket that ran 1/2 the length of the tank. When I laid down the bottom bead, it was about 1/8 of an inch too high and when the front pannel was placed the slilcone queezed out of the upper seam and not downward. After a few choice words I swallowed that bitter pill and realized that this is a do over
When I chose to make a custom tank I accepted the fact that this was a possibility so here I am. I believe I can correct this error on my next attempt. So now it time to cut it all apart and remove this incredibly tenacious silicone. After using a razor and acetone I plan to use #0000 steel wool as the last step is removing the last residue. Does that sound acceptable?
The other question I have uncle as you mentioned, is having the touch in getting the seams to even thickness. 3 of the 4 corners were right at 1/16 seam thickness and the 4th was at nearly an 1/8 which cause uneven pressure I believe. The rtv says keeping the seams less than 1/4" for it rated tensile strength so would this 1/16" variance really be a performance issue?
I realize that having all seams uniform is the goal and I need help understanding how to clamp a tank for even seams when I have 2 seams per side that can vary in thickness and still allow the pannels to be parallel.( one seam could be nearly glass to glass and the other @ 1/8 andstthe glass would still line up). Since I'm using black rtv it does add a degree of difficulty in identifying the edge of the glass once it is in place.
I am discouraged but not beaten and want to get this right. I appreciate any insight into my problems.
Justin