Looks good, sorry to hear about the tank cracking.
		
		
	 
Thanks, NemosWorld.  
Hey, everyone.  I'm off to Sacramento now to get another tank. A thought occurred to me: when I set up the 
new tank, why not insert the bulkheads with the 
flange side positioned in the 
internal overflow-box, 
not in the wooden, 
external overflow-box, as it was in the 
old tank?  Please recall that the design of the build is such that the 
internal overflow-box is too "skinny," front to back, to accommodate inserting the bulkhead "over the top" of the weir into the "trough" of the 
internal overflow-box.  Such a "skinny" design is aesthetic pleasing, but leaves little room for such maneuvers inside the 
internal overflow-box.  That is why I had the 
flange side of the bulkhead positioned inside the wooden, 
external overflow-box, not in the 
internal overflow-box.  As discussed below, when constructing my new tank, I might achieve better protection from water leakage at the bulkheads if I put the 
flange side of the bulkhead inside the 
internal overflow-box, not the 
external overflow-box.
You might ask how can I insert the bulky flange-side of the bulkhead into the skinny, 
internal overflow-box, when I 
couldn't do it in the last tank with the same design.  The answer lies in the 
order of construction.  Before I fabricate the 
internal overflow-box in the new tank, I could insert the bulkheads 
first.  That way, they would already 
 be there, once the internal overflow-box gets built up 
around those prepositioned bulkheads.  In doing this, I could have the flange side in the 
internal box.
I think that positioning the flange side of the bulkhead in the 
internal overflow-box would prevent leakage from the tank 
better then positioning the flange side of the bulkhead in the 
external overflow-box.   Here's why: When testing the tank yesterday, I observed that the waterline in the 
external overflow-box did not rise very high during normal operation.  However, the waterline of the 
internal overflow-box is always at maximum height, to the top of the weir.  It seems that there is a greater risk of water leakage at the bulkheads in the 
internal overflow-box than in the 
external overflow-box because there is more water pressure at the bulkheads in the 
internal overflow-box.  More pressure equals more opportunity to leak water at the bulkhead gasket/seals.  Stated otherwise, there is more water weight pressing against the bulkheads in the 
internal overflow-box, under normal circumstances, than there is pressing against the bulkheads in the 
external overflow-box.
I think I'll try this new design, with the flange side of the bulkhead in the 
internal overflow-box.  If I ever need to service or remove the bulkhead at the flange side, such that it needs to be removed from the 
internal overflow-box, I could always remove the glass weir of the 
internal overflow-box, to allow clearance to remove the bulkhead.  It's a bit of a labor, to cut the silicone at the weir's junction with the floor of the internal overflow-box in such a future repair, but how often will I need to do such repairs? Not often, based on my past experience with two BeanAnimal tanks not requiring such repairs.  
What do you all think about this plan?  Thank you.