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#1
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Hey all,
Soon after buying a brand new 65 gallon aquarium (above), I searched online for about two months for inexpensive, attractive aquarium stand designs that didn't require fancy woodworking equipment or expertise. I found several inexpensive designs, but the only ones that appeared physically sound required tools and woodworking knowledge that I don't have. Though I don't know much about wood or woodworking, I do have a decent head for physics. Most of the other designs seemed to lack a grounding in physics, leading to risky stands that I considered unsafe or bound to be short-lived. For example, one widely distributed design involves weight-bearing 2x4 struts underneath the main body of the tank. The 2x4s butt end-to-side against 2x4s that run the length of the aquarium. The studs underneath the aquarium are only connected to the lengthwise studs with four wood screws! Those screws are both load-bearing and screwed into the end grain of wood - they could shear or pull free at any time! Another common design I saw involved fiberboard - get that stuff wet and it will expand just before it falls totally apart. Not ideal for an aquarium stand. I wanted a stand design that was rooted in basic physics and that relied on the natural strength of wood rather than trusting in hardware. So I thought one up and built it. I would like to share my own experience with you, in the hope of contributing to society and to boost the quality and reliability of publicly available aquarium stand designs. If you don't own a lot of tools and don't know a lot about woodworking but would like to make a great-looking, sturdy aquarium stand of your own, I invite you to download complete, detailed, illlustrated instructions for... Dave's Amazing, Strong, Logical, Inexpensive, Not Very Hard to Build, and (Practically) Tool-Free Aquarium Stand at: http://home.comcast.net/~davesaquariumstand/ Thanks, and please spread the word. Dave |
#2
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Any chance you can just post thes eon your website as text? I
have no way (or desire) to read a "doc" file and a 4.7 meg zip file is kinda clunky for us poor dialup folks. -- Need Mercedes parts ? - http://parts.mbz.org http://www.mbz.org | Mercedes Mailing lists: http://lists.mbz.org 633CSi 250SE/C 300SD | Killies, killi.net, Crypts, aquaria.net 1970 280SE, 72 280SE | Old wris****ches http://watches.list.mbz.org |
#3
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Hey Richard,
Don't say I never did anything for ya'. There is now a web version. For those who may want to copy the design and supporting files to a hard drive, the .zip file is now 3.8 meg instead of 4.7. Thanks, Dave Richard Sexton wrote: Any chance you can just post thes eon your website as text? I have no way (or desire) to read a "doc" file and a 4.7 meg zip file is kinda clunky for us poor dialup folks. -- Need Mercedes parts ? - http://parts.mbz.org http://www.mbz.org | Mercedes Mailing lists: http://lists.mbz.org 633CSi 250SE/C 300SD | Killies, killi.net, Crypts, aquaria.net 1970 280SE, 72 280SE | Old wris****ches http://watches.list.mbz.org |
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