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Old 01-17-2012, 06:20 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mrfish55 View Post
Shoot some expanding foam underneath the foam board you already have on there, don't overdo it or it will lift the tank and don't use the low expansion window/ door foam as it dries soft, you want the one that dries stiff, you can stick a piece of rigid tube on the end of the nozzle so it can reach to the center, works great seen it done a number of times, make sure you level the tank before it sets.
Quote:
Originally Posted by lastlight View Post
Can't you build a very shallow dam around the plywood and pour a levelling compound in it? Then you'd have perfection?
THose are excellent ideas, they may not even need to take the tank out! I'll broach them both with the builder tomorrow morning. Thank you, I knew I spent hours trolling fish forums for a reason

Quote:
Originally Posted by Delphinus View Post
I like those ideas a lot, you guys think of everything! But on the flip side .. if he's paying professional builders/framers/carpenters/whatever to put this in, then they should be on the hook to make it right. It's their problem to fix.
Too true, but at this point it's about speed. Mark was right though, house builders don't really understand the allowances of an aquarium I don't think. What's 'good enough' for most carpentry jobs can be the difference between failure and not. When Kevin originally installed the stand, he put a 1/4 inch (1/2? can't really remember) sheet of really high quality oak plywood down on top. It was perfectly flat and would have worked great for the tank's purposes. But when the carpenter started working out how he could build the enclosure, I wouldn't let them pierce the steel of the stand to anchor anything to it so they had to replace Kevin's plywood with a 3 inch piece of plywood that they made on site by gluing several different sheets together. I stressed as hard as I could that it needed to be flat, and to be honest, late one night after it was done I went in there with a level and verified that it was myself. It seemed to be perfectly flat a couple of months ago. I'm not sure if I just suck with a level (though in my defence it is a rather large area to check with the tiny level I had), or if the wood has warped slowly as the glue has dried, but it is what it is now. As it stands, they're geared up to have the inspection for occupancy mid February, and that can't happen unless the house is in a state of 'near completion'. If we need to rip out the entire enclosure, the painters basically have to stop on the main floor for a week while the structure is re-manufactured, then they need to re-seal the insides of the enclosure, and all the while electrical and everything else that depends on the painters being done or near done will be on hold, and mid-february inspections wouldn't be possible. I fear I would be headed for divorce if that were to happen.

Again, thanks guys for the suggestions

Adam
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