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#1
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![]() Looks great, nice and open. Imagine water flow, crabs and fish bumping them, corals growing and shifting their center of gravity, the tank shaking when people walk by... The question of having the rocks easily removable or very stable is really a personal preference. Personally I lean toward stability, so I glue or cement my rocks. Others do the opposite.
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#2
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![]() Quote:
![]() remember when you set the rocks inside the tank, Rocks first, then sand. that will be the main reason your rockwork shifts if it ever does. |
#3
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![]() Quote:
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#4
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![]() I like to drill the rock and support it with acrylic rod, this makes it super strong. Then I use reef safe epoxy between the rocks to prevent them from pulling apart, you can even push small pieces of rubble rock into the epoxy to help hide it when you are done, after a couple months you won't even see the seam
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#5
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![]() What brand is reef safe epoxy?
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#6
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![]() Just the plain old two part sticks from any lfs instant ocean or the fluval one
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#7
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![]() Oh... that old stuff. I thought you meant real epoxy lol.
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#8
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![]() Instead of those two, you can use JB water weld or Loctite epoxy. It is same stuff but cheaper than ones made for "aquarium"
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