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#1
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![]() first of all acrylic can it be attached to glass i thought it couldn't. or is it that when its used as material for a drain it does not need to have a good seal, it just needs to hold enough to stay in one place???? i am currently in the process of building a drain and plumbing in a sump and am tossing the idea of using acrylic or glass for my drain around. any one have any suggestions that might tip the scales acrylic/glass? and even after having previously stated that i am not going to install a herbi style drain am starting to lean towards it. my tank needs to be drilled and because it is tempered on the bottom was planning on going out the back, and since im drilling away may as well punch three holes instead of two. which kind of leads me to my next question if you were in my shoes would you extend the drain all the way to the bottom of the tank or just a small drain a few inches under the water level??which brings us back to the original question if its a box at the top made of acrylic is there any glue that will attach it to the glass and hold it in place??: pro's con's any thoughts please.
![]() Last edited by trouble; 04-16-2009 at 10:17 AM. |
#2
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![]() For the record, yes you can make tanks out of acrylic & glass, however I've never looked into how it was done.
The only argument I can offer you in the glass acrylic debate is the acrylic scratches...easily. I know its just a drain? do you mean overflow?, but it scratches and if you need to see in, that can be quite annoying. |
#3
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![]() yeah sorry an overflow
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#4
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![]() Many tank manufactures offer tanks with plastic/acrylic overflows siliconed to the glass walls of the tank itself. I reckon the reasoning is that typically your overflow is not subject to the same stress and pressure of containing, say, 90, 120 or more gallons of water. And as you suggested, if the seal is compromised, it's not necessarily a disaster in the making. If it's a good silicone job, there should be no problem.
The only other issue I'm aware of is the different expansion rates of acrylic vs glass. This can cause a seal to eventually fail when subjected to large temperature changes on a regular basis. When I build the sump for the 90 I plan to set up, I was thinking I may use acrylic for baffles (plan to use an old 65 gal glass tank). Instead of trying to silicone the acrylic in, I thought I might silicone two narrow pieces of glass on each side, thereby creating a sort of slot to slide the acrylic into. Of course a perfect seal is not really required here, whereas for your application, you'd likely want something with a little more integrity. Could still apply silicone to the acrylic before sliding it down the slots though.
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Mike 77g sumpless SW DIY 10 watt multi-chip LED build ![]() |
#5
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![]() yeah, i think im going to go with glass seems to me i skirt a lot of issues by going that route. really the only reason i was thinking about going with acrylic was because i figured it would be easier to cut the grate/teeth into it around the top. as far as seeing into though i am going to go with tinted or smoked glass i dnt want to see the plumbing behind it. so i will make the overflow out of glass and i've bee thinking of making a lid to fit to keep the light out of the overflow, so i think ill make that out of acrylic and put the teeth into a lip on the underside of the lid. the only thing i am undecided on is wether to have the overflow extend the full depth of the tank or just take up say 6" or so at the top.
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#6
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![]() Couple of things
-your overflow doesn't need notches -check Reefjunkies build for a Herbie using bulkheads on the side (and chamber doesn't need to go to bottom of display) |
#7
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![]() you can always go with a glass overflow and just stop the glass below were you want the notches, then you can silicone a piece of acrylic to the face with the notches in it!!!
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500G Mixed Reef ![]() __________________________________ Electrician, Electronics Technician, I can help with any electrical questions you might have!! __________________________________ Kevin |