Hey guys,
I've taken on a custom tank out of an old grammaphone (turntable on top, speaker in bottom) piece of furniture that has already been converted into a 22G tank.
(complete lower section of tank)
Upon resealing the tank (it's 15 years old), I noticed that the bottom had cracked in the corner. So now I'm looking at ways of improving the distribution of weight. It seems like this would be the perfect case for using foam under it since the glass was resting directly on top of the plywood support. I was looking at using two 0.75" pressure treated pieces, but at 0.75, there's no room for the foam. We then thought of using a metal plate (painted steel or other) so that we could add foam beneath it. We have a maximum .75" of room to work with which makes it tough. I'm including pics to help illustrate our challenge. What would you guys recommend?
I've picked up some 1/4" ethafoam, but in google searching, can't find any info on whether it works for aquarium underlays or not.
Questions:
-Should I even be worrying about glass on the two pressure treated supports or not?
-If so, what would be the best way to distribute weight evenly with 3/4" of room to work with?
-Would ethafoam work ok, or is it too soft? (the foam most electronics come packaged in?
Pics:
(cracked corner reinforced with a CD case siliconed over it
The 2 supports made of pressure treated wood
(at 3/4", this is the room left for pushing the tank into the stand)
(the support system for the tank, using supports on the sides with L brackets reversed (so they are being pulled rather than being pushed due to limited space available. Front support is reinforced with smaller L brackets attached against stand [seen installing them])



LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks








Reply With Quote
