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#1 |
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Planted Member
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OK, so I have acquired 2 55 gallon tanks over the short period of time that I have had fish. I was able to get both of them (with all kinds of accessories) for super cheap. Also, please keep in mind my weekly budget is limited for fish spending :-)
Well, I keep looking at them and thinking how awesome it would be if i could combine the two in some form to make a larger play ground for my fish and inverts... I've gone through the idea of making a water bridges and the such, and while that idea is cool, i don't want to drop a whole lot of money into it as a project. If i'm going to spend money, i want it to be on plants (which i'm slowly acquiring) So, I was talking with a buddy of mine about some of the other ideas of my combining the tanks, not really thinking they'd be possible because of water pressure and the like, and he mentions someone who has taken 12 glass panels and made a large almost square short tank using glass supports and metal brackets siliconed on for extra strength... Well, i downloaded Google Sketchup and started mocking some things up. It will be a while before I can do ANYTHING because I have so many factors at play here, and i will have to figure out something to do with my fish while the silicone is curing. Any who, I wanted to see what you ladies and gents thought and get your 2 cents. Let me know what you think. all will have glass supports siliconed to the top EDIT: Ok, I've fixed my pictures so that they are hopefully clearer, again... I'm sorry for rushing and trying to get everything on one snapshot. Hopefully the below is better. PLAN A 4' wide x 2' deep x 2' tall PLAN B 8' wide x 1' deep x 2' tall I also toyed around with making an L shape with them too, but haven't mocked anything up yet. From the front From the bottom Last edited by drazend; 11-14-2012 at 03:55 AM.. Reason: Updated pictures |
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#2 |
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Planted Tank Guru
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I don't understand the sketch. Are you planning an 8 foot long, 2 foot depth, 2 foot high tank? That would use a 2 piece front (unlikely to work), a plywood back, one front cut in half for the two ends, and what for the bottom?
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Hoppy
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#4 | |
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Planted Member
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Quote:
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#5 | |
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Planted Member
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Quote:
There are three different tanks in the sketch: the top one has the plywood back and uses 4 side panels on the sides, 2 front panels for the front, and I was thinking the two bottom pieces with the two back pieces, but thinking it through... that won't work because the back is taller than the sides are deep, it would have ended up 2 feet deep and 2 feet tall by 8 feet long. The second one (bottom left in the first picture we'll call it "plan A" ) is basically taking one panel (front/back) off each tank and joining them where the removed panels were. It would make it 2' deep by 4' long by 2' tall The third (bottom right in the first picture, "plan B" ) takes one of the side panels off each tank and joins them where the panels were removed. this would make it 12" deep by 8' long by 2' tall. As soon as I get back on my laptop, I will fix the below pictures, i'm sorry for the confusion.
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#6 |
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Planted Tank Enthusiast
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I think u would probably be better off selling your two 55's and buying a 110
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#7 | |
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Planted Member
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#8 |
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Planted Tank Enthusiast
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Maybe have 2 different set ups in an L shape?
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#9 |
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Planted Member
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#10 |
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Planted Tank Enthusiast
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The sides shouldn't be tempered. You could connect them with a 6" clear PVC pipe tunnel!, Get some big time bulk heads, and find a 6" hole saw!
At the very least, you could set them next to each other in whatever config you like (L shaped, end to end, side by side), raise one up 6 inches, then drill the upper tank develop some clear acrylic spouts to put in the hole, and rig a canister filter to suck water out of the lower one, and pump it to the upper. |
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#11 |
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Planted Member
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I just realized you said 2 different setups. I'm such a dork... I really would like the extra room for the fish.
Sent from somewhere unknown to man...
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#12 | |
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Planted Member
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Quote:
Sent from somewhere unknown to man...
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#13 |
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Planted Tank Guru
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Maybe your friend was talking about this build?
http://www.plantedtank.net/forums/sh...d.php?t=185857 I think either of you plans could work. I build a rimless 41gl that was cut out an old 70 with 3/8" glass. From what I've learned I'd tell you not to run more than 24" length without a brace if the glass is 1/4" @ 24" T. If you drop the height to 16 you would be safe with 3' between cross bracing. I think for plants your 1st idea might be best. You could cut up the glass not being used for corner braces. Look at CrazyDaz's 200tank
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Last edited by DogFish; 11-14-2012 at 10:12 PM.. Reason: sp |
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#14 |
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Planted Tank Enthusiast
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It sounds pretty risky to me.
I think it would probably be cheaper and easier to just build a really huge water bridge out of acrylic or glass (I'm thinking something a foot wide) plus, if it fails, you only end up with a couple gallons on the floor, and isolated tanks (as opposed to hundreds of gallons, and no tanks). or if you went with james1542 suggestion, you might be able to rig up a really large (and slow) archimedes screw type pump, that way organisms could be transported up without harm. |
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#15 |
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Planted Tank Guru
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I really admire what Izabella87 has done, she just might have some ideas for you on how to combine the pieces of glass you have.
I would do this if I was in your boat. Really neat build. http://www.plantedtank.net/forums/sh...ht=fish+bridge
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http://www.plantedtank.net/forums/sh...d.php?t=195914
"180 gallons of Ferny Wood" |
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