The Ultimate DIY Rocks!

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Well, I had all my rock built and soaking in a large bin for about a month. It started to crumble, as though there were fault lines throughout the rock. I think that as the salt dissolved, it weakened the rock.

I ditched the whole batch, which was really a heart-breaker:

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Fortunately, I took photos so I can replicate this attempt.

My next batch will be a 3:1 sand:cement mix. I did a test piece with aragonite instead of sand, and it's much stronger than just cement with salt. It's quite porous, too, if mixed fairly dry. As with my salt mix rock, I'll probably use a thicker mix in key areas to keep it intact. I'm going to skip the addition of salt to avoid any fault lines this time around. Sand is $5 for a 40lb bag, which is a lot cheaper than aragonite.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8642462#post8642462 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Holmez221b
a 40lb bag for 5$.. Do they sell it at HD or Lowes

Yes, it's the Target brand play sand. I used it in FW tanks awhile back, no problem. I got it at HD. I think it's 40lb, could be 20lb. Either way, it's a big bag for just a few bucks.
 
Flusher, I agree with what you are saying. I made a small batch last winter with equal parts (2 cups of each) sand and aragonite to 1 part cement and elt it came out way better than a small batch i made that was 4 cups salt 1 part cement. I wound up making another batch 1 part cement, 1 part salt, 1 part sand, and 2 parts aragonite. I like this a lot and used it to patch up the ones I had that crumbled. It still came out pretty porous and looks pretty natural with the shells and what not in the aragonite. My next project will be building a tower in this manner which will be layer upon layer of homemade rock with each layer getting a little smaller so I have a volcano shaped rock in the center of my 110 I am putting up.

DYCE, http://reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=618586&perpage=25&pagenumber=1

There is the link. I want to try this in my new setup. I think it's a pretty good idea.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8641659#post8641659 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Dyceskynes
I am going to start working on a 20L crab tank and was thinking on having a rock back wall. Has anyone tried to form the cement on to egg crate diffuser for support? I want the panels to be fairly thin yet lighter in weight.
Something better than egg crate diffuser is coarse pond filter matt. You can cut holes in it and then stitch on a patch of the same material with monofilament fishing line to make a jutting out section or shelf.

http://www.enkoi.com/prod64.html

This is one place to get the matt. The fishing line I'll leave up to you.
 
so how again do you know when your rock is ready? Ive had some rock in the toilet for about a month now so i stuck it in a bucket of water. I tested the ph and its was good so does that mean its ready? Is that all we have to check?
 
How long was it in the bucket of water? If it hasn't raised the ph in a day to be safe I would say it's ok.
 
It sat in a bucket for a day. I dont know if it matters but it was just sitting in a bucket with no water movement the whole time. The Ph was actually like 7.9... Is Ph the only thing though i have to look at?
 
Joining the crowd and sharing my art (if you can call it that). Definitely not michaelangelo but my fishies certainly appreciate it. :D
DSC_0128-1.jpg

And another angle,
DSC_0127-1.jpg

Hope you likes. :rollface:
 
Thanks, that piece took several days to complete, the holes are all the way inside, it is relatively light because of that. I used Sakrete white type S (if that makes sense) from HD. Just be creative, I used the large bubble wraps, I cut a row of 2 or 3 bubbles, fold it and apply cement across the surface making sure you leave holes on the sides to retrieve the bubble wrap with a surgical clamp (or any similar device) once dried. Do this repeatedly until you get the desired size and shape. The trick is to have the right consistency of the cement and patience (do it by layers over several days). I like it because the fishes won't be able to get all the way inside...a haven for pods!
Here is the right side,
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I just relized that i bought the pellet salt that is 95.5% salt, i have seen rock salt but i was not sure if i could use this instead?

it is a water softener
 
Perhaps, but I imagine it would be a longer process to have each layer dissolved before you can move on to the next. If you do it in one sitting, the inner salt crystals may take very long time to dissolve and may even increase your salinity in the tank if you have not completely dissolved the innermost layers. I think the bubble wrap method is simpler, cheaper and faster.
 
No, you remove them after each layer dries up. I use a surgical clamp to grab the bubble wrap. Twisting as you pull helps.
 
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