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Thread: Acrylic/Plastic supply

  1. #1

    Default Acrylic/Plastic supply

    I'm thinking of building a small aquarium/refurium/frag tank thing and was wondering where the best place in San Antonio would be to go get what I need. Also the tank should be around 30L*16W*16D...roughly 33 gallons of actual water without rock,sand whatever. What thickness of acrylic do I need? I don't know if I'm actually going to go through with it but I wanted to get an idea of where to go and what to buy.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    06-07-2003
    Location
    NW / leon valley
    Posts
    851

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    for that size tank you need 3/8'' acrylic with 1'' trim around the top also in 3/8'' i built my refugium in 3/8'' and it's a 40 gal fug.it's doing great.

    dan
    350 gal. 7\'x36\'\'x25\'\'tall, , 3-400w.mh-10k, 2-6\' vho actinic, 175gal.sump, 6ft. 100gal zenia fuge,calcium reactor, kalk reactor and a carbon reactor. 7\' turbofloter 5000 skimmer.

  3. #3

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    sent you a PM

  4. #4
    Join Date
    06-24-2003
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    137

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    I'm interested in doing the same thing. BTW, would I be saving any money by buying acrylic/glass to build my own tank? Since I'm on a tiny budget, I figured I could make it cheaper than it would cost to buy one new or wait for someone to come around who needs to sell their tank cheaply...

  5. #5
    Join Date
    12-09-2002
    Location
    San Antonio
    Posts
    1,998

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    Here's my suggestion, although Dan might disagree. Buy Spartech polycast or Cyro GP 3/8". If both of you are going to build tanks, you could split a sheet. Cut it with a 60 tooth triple chip grind carbide blade, or pay Dan to cut it for you, if he'll be nice enough to do it. You can use weldon #4, do not use weldon #3, to solvent weld. But, a far stronger joint would be with weldon #40, which is 2 part polimerizing cement. Unfortunately, that complicates your building a bit, because you have to rout shallow grooves, like "dado" grooves, to set the edge of the piece you're cementing in. At the least, if you solvent weld, you should leave a 1/4" overhang, then flushtrim with a router. Actually, if you can get your hands on a solvent called "M.C. bond" it's stronger than the weldon solvents.

    In terms of saving money, it is cheaper to buy acrylic than a finished tank, but you could probably get Dan to make you a nice one at a reasonable price. The first sump/refugium that I made worked out okay for the few months that I had that set up. The test, though, is whether or not it will last years. Certainly the cheapest route is to buy a used glass aquarium that meets your needs. Cast 3/8" acrylic, Spartech or Cyro, is about $250 for a sheet at least. (I paid more than that for black.)

    Of the local places, I think the service at Plastic Supply of San Antonio is the best. They do the best cutting IME. Good luck!

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