<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12803422#post12803422 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by GIJOE007
BeanAnimal:
I think you need to take it easy on other peoples opinions and not down talk thier ideas or try and "dis-prove" them all together.
With all due respect, If you wish to comment on my post, keep it in context to the thread. If you disagree with MY post, then please illustrate why in context to the subject, otherwise please refrain from telling me how I should communicate my ideas and interact with others. You requested that i do not "talk down" to others, but is that not what YOU just did to me? Please, lets keep this in the arena of the subject at hand
Anyway, lets not confuse OPINION with FACT. (I have used CAPITALS simply to highlihgt they key points here, not to shout or convey condescension).
My problems are with the reasoning and supporting arguments that Rhodophyta used to suggest what he presented as the FACTS. I do not (do not) agree with them and used the FACTS to explain why. It is not "opinion bashing" it is a simple matter of correcting that which is incorrect.
Rhodophyta stated that resting a modern tank on a perfectly flat surface is DANGEROUS. That is not at all true. The logic he used to support that statement is not true either. The FACT is that the tank SHOULD rest on a perfectly FLAT and HARD surface. People attempt to use FOAM to compensate for surfaces that ARE NOT FLAT.
Rhodophyta stated that glass tank manufacturers suggest putting foam ONLY under the corners. This is patently untrue. The FACT is that most tank manufacturers advise AGAINST using FOAM under the tank at all. They instead insist that the stand must be perfectly flat or the OEM stand be used. A FEW manufacturers do advocate the use of rigid foam. Again, we are talking about TRIMMED GLASS tanks, not trimless or acrylic.
Rhodophyta suggested putting foam under ONLY the CORNERS of a tank. That is bad advice posted in a public form. The fact is that supporting ONLY the corners will move ALL of the load to ONLY the corners (where it is NOT supposed to be). The fact is that using SOFT material under those corners will add torsional forces to the panels and seams that would OTHERWISE not exist on a flat stand.
The FACT is that a trimmed glass tank is designed to be supported by the ENTIRE perimeter (as much as possible, see Riches post and my comments) where the load is distributed over a large linear surface NOT point loaded on 4 corners.
Rhodophyta stated that OLD tanks have the sides built ON the bottoms and NEW tanks have the bottom suspended BETWEEN the sides. The fact is that MANY (most) new tanks are built with the sides built ON the bottom (opposite of what he posted). The fact is that MANY older tanks had the bottom suspened between the sides (opposite of what he posted).
I have known many people to use foam, coark board, etc as tank underlay and have no issues to date or horror stories to tell of it.
The issue here is with the "put foam under the corners" and the supporting arguments. Lets not get this twisted into something it is NOT.
Anecdotal evidence has nothing to do with my comments. I have seen tanks supported by cinder blocks at the ENDS only. That does NOT make it a GOOD idea or safe. It just means that somebody has done it and not had a disaster. We can come up with thousands of examples of doing things that are NOT good ideas but did not cause a disaster. Furthermore, if you poke around you WILL find plenty of examples of cracked tanks due to improper support. If YOU worked for a tank manufacturer you would see a LOT more.
No to say your wrong, but just because its not your way doesn't mean it's the wrong way!!
There IS a right way and a wrong way to do certain things. There is good advice and bad advice. There is FACT and there is OPINION. This thread is a perfect example. You are advocating accepting OPINION at any level because it is the nice thing to do. The FACT is that the ADVICE posted based on bad OPINION is bad advice.
If and when YOU see BAD ADVICE you should correct it so that other people do not head the advice and pass it along. It is how we all learn and how knowledge progresses.