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Question: Is it safe to mount an aquarium (20 gallons, long) so that it
rests on rails along the long sides, but not the short sides? From eyeballing it it looks this should be safe, but a word or two of authority would be reassuring. |
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![]() "Flying Squirrel" wrote in message ... Question: Is it safe to mount an aquarium (20 gallons, long) so that it rests on rails along the long sides, but not the short sides? From eyeballing it it looks this should be safe, but a word or two of authority would be reassuring. FWIW my 55 gallon sump is supported that way- leak free for 6+ months now. I don't know that it is recommended- just my experience. -- Toni http://www.cearbhaill.com/discus.htm |
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"Flying Squirrel" wrote in message
... Question: Is it safe to mount an aquarium (20 gallons, long) so tha sts on rails along the long sides, but not the short sides? From eyeballing it it looks this should be safe, but a word or two of authority would be reassuring. If you want to have piece of mind, then no it's not safe, you're increasing your chance of a leak (there's a reason why there are four sides that usually get supported). If you don't mind a sudden leak down the road, then chances are it will work for some time, how long, no one knows. Harry |
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"Flying Squirrel" wrote in message
... Question: Is it safe to mount an aquarium (20 gallons, long) so that it rests on rails along the long sides, but not the short sides? From eyeballing it it looks this should be safe, but a word or two of authority would be reassuring. From my experience, no problem. For smaller tanks, I sometimes have them held up by only a rail a few inches in from the short sides! The only concern is that the stand is flat, so no twist stress is added. There have been metal stands manufactured which had the end rails lower than the sides, so the ends didn't support the tank at all. Personally, I think you could hold up many types of tanks by a wood block in each corner. The tank's base is held by the long sides, and the amount of pressure needed to vertically break a pane of glass in a vertical position should require many more times the amount of weight in the tank. The only concern is again, that the 4 corner blocks equally contact the glass so no twist is introduced. When you put an empty tank on a stand, slide something thin under the corners to check to see if there is a gap. That gap will usually disappear when the tank is filled, but the size of the gap indicates how much your silicone needs to stretch to compensate. The more it is stretched, the less protection is remaining. Tanks don't usually come apart (only mine do that ;~). They develop a leak from an existing hole in the silicone, or from being stretched, the develop a leak. Infrequently, some tanks will not flex to fill a gap, and you can always slide paper under one corner. Not sure how safe this is (better or worst than having the silicone flexing?), but it usually only happens with small tanks. Other considerations, stand type affects stability (during parties, earthquakes, kids climbing etc), and tank quality (thickness of glass) affects it's ability to absorb stand imperfections. For most applications, check and fill gap with suitable material as applicable, fill tank, jump up & down to check sway, secure stand as applicable. Based on size, weight and orientation to floor, check floor. Based on floor material, check stand's 'footprint' for floor damage. -- www.NetMax.tk |
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In message , NetMax
writes snip Based on floor material, check stand's 'footprint' for floor damage. I have wondered about this, largely in connections with my bath, which when full of water and me and the occasional small child insisting on getting in, must weigh more than a 60ish (US) gallon tank full of water, and assumed that the way it's spread (c.f. stiletto heels) is the problem. I'd thought that if the stand has 4 "feet" rather than a base I'd put a piece of (for example) exterior ply underneath do stop it digging holes in the floorboards. Does this make any sense at all? -- sophie |
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sophie wrote in
: I have wondered about this, largely in connections with my bath, which when full of water and me and the occasional small child insisting on getting in, must weigh more than a 60ish (US) gallon tank full of water, and assumed that the way it's spread (c.f. stiletto heels) is the problem. I'd thought that if the stand has 4 "feet" rather than a base I'd put a piece of (for example) exterior ply underneath do stop it digging holes in the floorboards. Does this make any sense at all? Yup. That is why they try to discourage stilletto heals on airplanes. As you decrease the area of something which is standing on something else, the pressure increases. Try it with a pencil. Press the eraser against your hand and then switch it over and do the same with the sharpened end... Marcel |
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In message , Marcel
Beaudoin writes sophie wrote in : I have wondered about this, largely in connections with my bath, which when full of water and me and the occasional small child insisting on getting in, must weigh more than a 60ish (US) gallon tank full of water, and assumed that the way it's spread (c.f. stiletto heels) is the problem. I'd thought that if the stand has 4 "feet" rather than a base I'd put a piece of (for example) exterior ply underneath do stop it digging holes in the floorboards. Does this make any sense at all? Yup. That is why they try to discourage stilletto heals on airplanes. As you decrease the area of something which is standing on something else, the pressure increases. Try it with a pencil. Press the eraser against your hand and then switch it over and do the same with the sharpened end... I understand about pressure and the area to which a force is applied, I was wondering more about the strength of my floorboards! -- sophie |
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sophie wrote in
: I'd thought that if the stand has 4 "feet" rather than a base I'd put a piece of (for example) exterior ply underneath do stop it digging holes in the floorboards. Does this make any sense at all? Yup. That is why they try to discourage stilletto heals on airplanes. As you decrease the area of something which is standing on something else, the pressure increases. Try it with a pencil. Press the eraser against your hand and then switch it over and do the same with the sharpened end... I understand about pressure and the area to which a force is applied, I was wondering more about the strength of my floorboards! Ahhh. Oops. But yeah, that should work. You wouldn't even need to put a whole piece of ply underneath. A piece a couple of inches square would do the job. Marcel |
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On Tue, 8 Jun 2004 10:47:31 -0400, "NetMax"
bubbled forth the following: Personally, I think you could hold up many types of tanks by a wood block in each corner. The tank's base is held by the long sides, and the amount of pressure needed to vertically break a pane of glass in a vertical position should require many more times the amount of weight in the tank. The only concern is again, that the 4 corner blocks equally contact the glass so no twist is introduced. While I've done this with small tanks (5 and 10 gal), I'd be a bit leery with anything much larger. There's one website (can't find the link now) where they recommend that the 4 sides of the aquarium extend below the bottom panel. This is so you don't have to build a frame to hold the bottom panel up off of a solid topped stand. In this case the bottom panel is only held by the silicone, with not even the support of wood blocks under each corner. However, I'm not so sure I'd want to put that much faith in the strength of the silicone. The bottom joint will be under more stress this way, not only the water pressure pushing the side panel out, but the weight of the water and decorations pushing the bottom panel down. Most DIY sites show that the side panels should be resting on the bottom panel. All manufactured glass tanks I've seen are built this way. The forces on the bottom joint are mainly shear (water pressure pushing the side panel out), with some compression from the weight of the vertical panes. When you only support the 4 corners, you are asking the silicone to hold the bottom pane up to the vertical panes, which places the joint in both tension and shear, and silicone is stronger under shear than tension IIRC. While it may hold for years, you may be stressing the silicone to the breaking point. I have this mental picture of very small earthquake, or just a 2 pound rock slipping from your hand a few inches above the substrate being the proverbial last straw. causing the joint to fail all at once, opening up like a zipper, causing the bottom pane to break into many pieces. Plus I'm sure this would void any warranty on the tank. I have no scientific or experiential data to say it won't work, but that mental picture makes me rather be safe than sorry, though as always, ymmv Jerry |
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"The Outcaste" wrote in message
... On Tue, 8 Jun 2004 10:47:31 -0400, "NetMax" bubbled forth the following: Personally, I think you could hold up many types of tanks by a wood block in each corner. The tank's base is held by the long sides, and the amount of pressure needed to vertically break a pane of glass in a vertical position should require many more times the amount of weight in the tank. The only concern is again, that the 4 corner blocks equally contact the glass so no twist is introduced. While I've done this with small tanks (5 and 10 gal), I'd be a bit leery with anything much larger. There's one website (can't find the link now) where they recommend that the 4 sides of the aquarium extend below the bottom panel. This is so you don't have to build a frame to hold the bottom panel up off of a solid topped stand. In this case the bottom panel is only held by the silicone, with not even the support of wood blocks under each corner. However, I'm not so sure I'd want to put that much faith in the strength of the silicone. The bottom joint will be under more stress this way, not only the water pressure pushing the side panel out, but the weight of the water and decorations pushing the bottom panel down. Most DIY sites show that the side panels should be resting on the bottom panel. All manufactured glass tanks I've seen are built this way. The forces on the bottom joint are mainly shear (water pressure pushing the side panel out), with some compression from the weight of the vertical panes. When you only support the 4 corners, you are asking the silicone to hold the bottom pane up to the vertical panes, which places the joint in both tension and shear, and silicone is stronger under shear than tension IIRC. While it may hold for years, you may be stressing the silicone to the breaking point. I have this mental picture of very small earthquake, or just a 2 pound rock slipping from your hand a few inches above the substrate being the proverbial last straw. causing the joint to fail all at once, opening up like a zipper, causing the bottom pane to break into many pieces. Plus I'm sure this would void any warranty on the tank. I have no scientific or experiential data to say it won't work, but that mental picture makes me rather be safe than sorry, though as always, ymmv Jerry What country are you in? From Europe & Asia, I tend to see more flat bottom tanks (glass sides sit on bottom pane as you described), but the bottom trim raises the bottom so it doesn't touch the stand. From North American manufacturers, it mostly seems to be the opposite, where the tank sits on the glass sides, with the bottom siliconed inside and above the stand. I'm not familiar with the pros & cons, but it would surely affect the jigging needed to build them. When I look at functional design advantages and at manufacturing advantages, I see merit in both designs, at least similar enough that there isn't an obvious better design. In case you are wondering where the edge bottom has a structural advantage over the pane bottom, if we assume that the silcone bead exceeds the worst case weight condtion in the edge bottom design, then there is a superior bond between the bottom and the side panes with this configuration. To explain in text is a bit labourous, but I'll do my best. With a pane bottom design you mentioned, there are 2 silicone beads. Bead 1 is between the glass surfaces and bead 2 is a chamfered bead running inside the tank (on top). With the edge bottom design, there are 3 silicone beads, between the glass surfaces, and a chamfered bead on each side of the bottom pane. An argument could be made that the strongest vector of concern is pushing outward on the side panes at the very bottom, so 3 beads are slightly stronger than 2 (even if all 3 are in line with the side vector, while the 2 bead design has 1 bead perpendicular to the side vector). If I sound like I know more than I do, then you are right ;~). I'm not a mechanical engineer, but it's puzzled me how 2 different designs have continued to co-exist. I don't think the average buyer notices one from the other, so it would seem to be driven by internal forces rather than consumers. -- www.NetMax.tk |
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