cerreta
Premium Member
This Project will be done to replace a current 80 gallon reef tank. The foot print is the same, but I want to rebuild the furniture, canopy, stand, and chiller cabinet. The furniture will be made of pine and feature a Watco stain that matches other furniture in the home. The project trimwork will also match that of the other furniture. I will also replace the present 20 gallon nano tank sitting atop the chiller cabinet with a 30" tall nano. Most of the glass to build this nano will come from the busted 110 I inherited from Jason.
This build will occur over several months. If you have any comments or suggestions for improving this system, please help, I am open to ideas.
ââ"šÂ¬Ã‚¦and the project begins.
Step one is to build a canopy. It will feature cabinet style pocket holes, trim to match other furniture in the home, and a Watco dark stain. The wood is select Pine for the trim and Sanded Pine Plywood for the sides and top.
The canopy has two swing-out front doors to facilitate front entry into the canopy. The top is solid, no lid there. The canopy also features an open back with three fans for cooling. Black eggcrate is used on the open back to prevent fish from leaping out and light from escaping. The interior was treated with highly reflective 1 mil metallic mylar film.
Lighting is provided by two 250watt HQI Phoenix 14k bulbs in PFO pendants mounted lengthwise under the canopy, powered by electronic Reef Fanatic ballasts. They are fixed to the top with Ã"šÃ‚½Ã¢â"šÂ¬Ã‚ aluminum spacers for ventilation purposes. MH will be run about 4-6 hours a day. The canopy also features four 46.5ââ"šÂ¬Ã‚ URI VHO bulbs (two actinic and two 50/50) powered by an IceCap 660 ballast. This light rack will be mounted on a ball bearing drawer slider so that the lights can be moved out the back of the canopy while reaching in from the front doors.
PICTURES:
1. I purchased a complete Kreg K2 pocket hole jig on ebay for $80. It was cheaper than buying a $150 biscuit joiner. Boy am I happy with this! It works great and the best part is that you drill the holes, screw, and move on. No wait time necessary, unlike letting the biscuits which need time for the glue to set and the bicuit to swell and seat in place.
Here is wat the drilled holes look like. These pocket holes are used to build professional kitchen cabinets.
The door frame and other parts that will be stained were fitted with Pine Pocket Hole Plugs.
This is the pic before sanding
This is the pic after sanding the plug flush with the door frame:
http://members.cox.net/sdcerreta/CanopyInterior 021.jpg
I do not like the look of paint, so I chose to avoid painting the interior of the canopy white as a reflective surface. Instead I am trying to use 1 mil highly reflective mylar film. This is commonly used in hydroponics.
The cost was $20. I already had the adhesive, which I bought three years ago at HD for about $25. The jug is still 3/4 full. This phase of the project was accomplished in about 4 hours. The panels were sanded then cleaned with a sticky sawdust remover. Mylar film was oversized precut for the two sides, the two doors, the back and the top panels. Then the surfaces were rubbed with adhesive. It was applied with a cut up T-shirt, no cost there.
I used a foam pad and an algae scraper to work the mylar film into the corners of the canopy. The application of mylar was easy. The film is sold in 12mil and 2 mil thickness. The 2 mil stuff cost $40 and I went cheap. I'm glad. The film was durable and did not tear during the application process. It was also very easy to work with this thi material. I think the thicker stuff may have been too difficult to work into the corners. The final look was decent. I say it was not great because the mirror finish was lost. This film was not intended to be glued to wood, thus it has rippling due to the glue and wood surfaces. However, the reflective surface is far better than reflective white paint!
PICTURES:
The 1 mil mylar film sold in a 25ft roll for $20 from a local hydroponics store:
Tools for application include a razor blade, foam pad, and plastic algae scraper:
Lockweld contact adhesive bought at Home Depot several years ago for about $25.00
These are pictures of the mylar film during application to the canopy. Spreading the mylar with foam pad:
Working mylar into the corners with an algae scraper:
This is a picture after applying mylar to all canopy surfaces desired:
http://members.cox.net/sdcerreta/CanopyInterior 039.jpg
Here is a reflective picture. You can see my blurred image. It is not the mirror image that reflectors are capable of, but it cost me much less!!!
http://members.cox.net/sdcerreta/CanopyInterior%
20043.jpg
As a final note, I have no idea if this stuff will last. It may be fine, or it may fall off in a week. I will let you all know how it holds up after the next couple months of use. The adhesive does seem to be working though.
This build will occur over several months. If you have any comments or suggestions for improving this system, please help, I am open to ideas.
ââ"šÂ¬Ã‚¦and the project begins.
Step one is to build a canopy. It will feature cabinet style pocket holes, trim to match other furniture in the home, and a Watco dark stain. The wood is select Pine for the trim and Sanded Pine Plywood for the sides and top.
The canopy has two swing-out front doors to facilitate front entry into the canopy. The top is solid, no lid there. The canopy also features an open back with three fans for cooling. Black eggcrate is used on the open back to prevent fish from leaping out and light from escaping. The interior was treated with highly reflective 1 mil metallic mylar film.
Lighting is provided by two 250watt HQI Phoenix 14k bulbs in PFO pendants mounted lengthwise under the canopy, powered by electronic Reef Fanatic ballasts. They are fixed to the top with Ã"šÃ‚½Ã¢â"šÂ¬Ã‚ aluminum spacers for ventilation purposes. MH will be run about 4-6 hours a day. The canopy also features four 46.5ââ"šÂ¬Ã‚ URI VHO bulbs (two actinic and two 50/50) powered by an IceCap 660 ballast. This light rack will be mounted on a ball bearing drawer slider so that the lights can be moved out the back of the canopy while reaching in from the front doors.
PICTURES:
1. I purchased a complete Kreg K2 pocket hole jig on ebay for $80. It was cheaper than buying a $150 biscuit joiner. Boy am I happy with this! It works great and the best part is that you drill the holes, screw, and move on. No wait time necessary, unlike letting the biscuits which need time for the glue to set and the bicuit to swell and seat in place.

Here is wat the drilled holes look like. These pocket holes are used to build professional kitchen cabinets.

The door frame and other parts that will be stained were fitted with Pine Pocket Hole Plugs.
This is the pic before sanding

This is the pic after sanding the plug flush with the door frame:
http://members.cox.net/sdcerreta/CanopyInterior 021.jpg
I do not like the look of paint, so I chose to avoid painting the interior of the canopy white as a reflective surface. Instead I am trying to use 1 mil highly reflective mylar film. This is commonly used in hydroponics.
The cost was $20. I already had the adhesive, which I bought three years ago at HD for about $25. The jug is still 3/4 full. This phase of the project was accomplished in about 4 hours. The panels were sanded then cleaned with a sticky sawdust remover. Mylar film was oversized precut for the two sides, the two doors, the back and the top panels. Then the surfaces were rubbed with adhesive. It was applied with a cut up T-shirt, no cost there.
I used a foam pad and an algae scraper to work the mylar film into the corners of the canopy. The application of mylar was easy. The film is sold in 12mil and 2 mil thickness. The 2 mil stuff cost $40 and I went cheap. I'm glad. The film was durable and did not tear during the application process. It was also very easy to work with this thi material. I think the thicker stuff may have been too difficult to work into the corners. The final look was decent. I say it was not great because the mirror finish was lost. This film was not intended to be glued to wood, thus it has rippling due to the glue and wood surfaces. However, the reflective surface is far better than reflective white paint!
PICTURES:
The 1 mil mylar film sold in a 25ft roll for $20 from a local hydroponics store:

Tools for application include a razor blade, foam pad, and plastic algae scraper:

Lockweld contact adhesive bought at Home Depot several years ago for about $25.00

These are pictures of the mylar film during application to the canopy. Spreading the mylar with foam pad:

Working mylar into the corners with an algae scraper:

This is a picture after applying mylar to all canopy surfaces desired:
http://members.cox.net/sdcerreta/CanopyInterior 039.jpg
Here is a reflective picture. You can see my blurred image. It is not the mirror image that reflectors are capable of, but it cost me much less!!!
http://members.cox.net/sdcerreta/CanopyInterior%
20043.jpg
As a final note, I have no idea if this stuff will last. It may be fine, or it may fall off in a week. I will let you all know how it holds up after the next couple months of use. The adhesive does seem to be working though.