waterdrop
Enthusiastic "Re-Beginner"
OK, its Tuesday and I'm back. You TFFers are so great - I'm really glad I posted about it even though I was almost too embarrased to.
I got a new tank. The operations manager was very nice and immediately swapped out the cracked tank for a matching new one of the same model. I brought it home and rinsed it up.
But here's where this whole story took a NEW TWIST! I have discovered the REASON, I think...
As you'll recall, this is one of those matching tank/stand sets you see all the time in the LFS now, right? At least, here in the US and in the big box stores this is what you see especially. This stand has top and bottom boards that match the shape of the tank exactly, with maybe a half inch overhang all around. The right half is a cabinet with a door, the left half has 3 little open shelves and a steel pole supporting the top board on that corner.
When I brought the new tank home I was all focused on being more extreme in my leveling process. I had my 5 foot carpenters level out and decided I would get very thin shims of some sort to raise the slightly lower side to really get my bubble centered on the level. I cruised the isles of the giant hardware store and finally found the perfect thing - long strips of sticky backed vinyl very thin strips, several inches wide. I turned the cabinet upside down and measured the perfect size, cut it with a razor knife, peeled the paper and stuck it to the underside on one side of the cabinet, finally getting the cabinet even more perfectly level than before - I was very pleased with myself....
As I smoothed my hand over the newly level top surface I suddenly realized that there was a BUMP! Slowly, to my dismay, I realized that the steel post of the front left corner must have a larger washer on top of it, inside the wood but that the weight of the floating tank edge must put its weight out around the outside edge, past this washer. The top of the post is just somehow pushing up and the wood material to form a little rounded bump.
Suddenly it all came clear! The front left corner of the tank had been sitting partially on this bump (were talking maybe 1/8th inch here?) and that's right where one side of the crack in the bottom glass started. This was also the very slightly lower side (the whole left side) of the overall tank that I had just shimmed up to make it more perfectly level -- so this would have been the lower side taking slightly more water pressure on the old tank that cracked. Anyway, the STAND, not the tank, caused the failure.
This stand is just a bad design! But of course I'm trying to work within the overall situation - I have lights at this 2ft length and my filter is sized for this volume tank, not to mention the replacement tank I've just wrestled home and my poor bacteria spending yet another night out in the cold shed while the heater probably runs a lot! (You feel very attached to your bacteria after 70 odd days
So its either solve the bump via moving the tank off-center to the very left edge of the top board, to minimize the bump effect and hope that the new leveling helps. Or solve the bump with a some sort of new foam layer that must contact the plastic bottom edge of the tank frame all around between the tank and stand. Or get the operations manager to swap the stand for an identical but new stand. Or scrap the entire tank and stand and maybe even lights risking even more time for my bacteria and plants out in the bucket (sheesh!!) I had trouble sleeping last night!
Well my TFF friends, that's where I'm at... gotta go wake the kids for school, see ya later,
~~waterdrop~~
I got a new tank. The operations manager was very nice and immediately swapped out the cracked tank for a matching new one of the same model. I brought it home and rinsed it up.
But here's where this whole story took a NEW TWIST! I have discovered the REASON, I think...
As you'll recall, this is one of those matching tank/stand sets you see all the time in the LFS now, right? At least, here in the US and in the big box stores this is what you see especially. This stand has top and bottom boards that match the shape of the tank exactly, with maybe a half inch overhang all around. The right half is a cabinet with a door, the left half has 3 little open shelves and a steel pole supporting the top board on that corner.
When I brought the new tank home I was all focused on being more extreme in my leveling process. I had my 5 foot carpenters level out and decided I would get very thin shims of some sort to raise the slightly lower side to really get my bubble centered on the level. I cruised the isles of the giant hardware store and finally found the perfect thing - long strips of sticky backed vinyl very thin strips, several inches wide. I turned the cabinet upside down and measured the perfect size, cut it with a razor knife, peeled the paper and stuck it to the underside on one side of the cabinet, finally getting the cabinet even more perfectly level than before - I was very pleased with myself....
As I smoothed my hand over the newly level top surface I suddenly realized that there was a BUMP! Slowly, to my dismay, I realized that the steel post of the front left corner must have a larger washer on top of it, inside the wood but that the weight of the floating tank edge must put its weight out around the outside edge, past this washer. The top of the post is just somehow pushing up and the wood material to form a little rounded bump.
Suddenly it all came clear! The front left corner of the tank had been sitting partially on this bump (were talking maybe 1/8th inch here?) and that's right where one side of the crack in the bottom glass started. This was also the very slightly lower side (the whole left side) of the overall tank that I had just shimmed up to make it more perfectly level -- so this would have been the lower side taking slightly more water pressure on the old tank that cracked. Anyway, the STAND, not the tank, caused the failure.
This stand is just a bad design! But of course I'm trying to work within the overall situation - I have lights at this 2ft length and my filter is sized for this volume tank, not to mention the replacement tank I've just wrestled home and my poor bacteria spending yet another night out in the cold shed while the heater probably runs a lot! (You feel very attached to your bacteria after 70 odd days
So its either solve the bump via moving the tank off-center to the very left edge of the top board, to minimize the bump effect and hope that the new leveling helps. Or solve the bump with a some sort of new foam layer that must contact the plastic bottom edge of the tank frame all around between the tank and stand. Or get the operations manager to swap the stand for an identical but new stand. Or scrap the entire tank and stand and maybe even lights risking even more time for my bacteria and plants out in the bucket (sheesh!!) I had trouble sleeping last night!
Well my TFF friends, that's where I'm at... gotta go wake the kids for school, see ya later,
~~waterdrop~~