Hello Everyone!
This is my first post, new to the forum. I recently decided to become an aquarium hobbyist but couldn't find a tank that was very interesting, so I designed and fabricated my own aquatic feature from acrylic. Each tank is 30x30x60cm which equates to a 162 Liter total capacity, not including the fish bridge which is 8x8x85cm and stretches the entire length of the feature whilst it's pushed together. The tanks can also be placed further apart to allow for ease of cleaning and because it looks awesome, but I've pushed mine together so it fits in the wall cavity in my home.
[video=youtube;NeaH2pU6ycE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NeaH2pU6ycE[/video]
Instead of bending the Acrylic twice to form an edge-less design, I went with straight standard edges so that the tanks would look definitively separate and so that the light from the rear of the tank would be unobstructed internally; which allows the blue lighting effect to reach all areas of the acrylic. Almost as if the tank is made of light. It also creates a bold contrast against the dark substrate, forming an attractive outline of the feature.
To compliment the tanks I used three clear acrylic clamps, one per tank. These hold the intake and outlet hoses in place. Even though not visible, I wanted the hose connections to look really organized. I used standard hose fittings and clear hose to create a tailored plumbing solution, the outlet from the canister filter splits into a T, flowing into each side tank. I used a nozzle on the outlet to act like a power-head, and it gives me incredible surface agitation without creating too much aggressive water movement throughout the tank. The inlet is simple, and is located centrally in the center tank. I've since added a small hang-on filter to the center tank to allow for additional surface agitation, works beautifully and cant be seen!
An important part of this aquarium is the background art. I altered a very high resolution image to suit my application and printed it on Static Cling stock, which is typically used for window displays and advertisements etc. It allows me to have a semi-permanent product applied to the tank which won't fade, be damaged by water and will remain completely flush with the acrylic. This has equated to an incredible effect inside the tank, the lighting and the aquascape also further compliment the background art; with warmer light hitting the 'sunset' horizon and the tanks blue light filtering into the lower portion of the aquarium. Before printing, I edited the image and reduced the blue saturation and heightened the greens so that the background trees dint become blue martian trees.
Water changes are easy. I have a tap water conditioner hidden away in a compartment which I hang into the left hand tank and gravity feed the water out from the right tank. This allows the entire aquarium (fish bridge included) to be flushed out once or twice a week, roughly a 35% change each week. I would do it more often, but with no ammonia, no nitrates, incredible oxygen and a 8-1 hourly filtration ratio the tank virtually sustains itself.
This is the finished aquarium as of a couple of weeks ago, I've made several changes since then. I wanted to create a true landscape, some optical illusions and encourage the tank's inhabitants to be more active. They spend lot's of time in the fish bridge and often move from tank to tank, which is cool because every time you look at it the fish have moved locations. Except for the bottom dwellers, they've staked out their homes and spend their days cleaning the tank for me. The canister filter is a 800LPH Ehiem Classic, which I've added a crystal clear water bag too because the wood was tainting my water with a yellow tinge. There is also an inline water heater on the outflow line which maintains a constant 28 degrees. Lighting consists of a single 40w on the top hidden behind the fish bridge, it has a warmer color to highlight the sunset. The other is a 20 watt blue, which is mounted behind the aquarium. In the ceiling above is a set of 80w high power led spot lights which are directed towards each side tank to fill in the gaps.
So far I have perfect water conditions which are stable and it's repetitively heavily planted considering the floor size being only 270 Square Cm. It's slightly overstocked, yet to no ill effect because i'I've chosen compatible community fish which each have a different preferred zone in the aquarium, top mid and low. The inhabitants are very active, explore often and play with each other happily. There's no predatory presence, thus no stress that I've been aware of.
The whole project hasn't been that costly, sure with what i'd spent I could have bought a much larger glass tank; but it just wouldn't have fit my requirements. I'm happy with the finished product, it's the type of aquarium you can look at for hours and hours and never get bored. Plus, It given our home a wow factor as people enter through the front facade and see it glowing at the end of the hallway. I was originally worried about in being hard to clean, but it's an absolute breeze. Water change takes less than 10min and a service clean taken just less than an hour, which i've only had to do once. There's just no algae build up and the water flow in the tank forces most of the bad stuff into the filter vs the substrate or the tank surface.
Well, that's all I can think of writing for now. I'd greatly appreciate your feedback!!!
PS: I'll do another video soon, the aquascape and tank stock have been dramatically improved since.
Thanks!!!
This is my first post, new to the forum. I recently decided to become an aquarium hobbyist but couldn't find a tank that was very interesting, so I designed and fabricated my own aquatic feature from acrylic. Each tank is 30x30x60cm which equates to a 162 Liter total capacity, not including the fish bridge which is 8x8x85cm and stretches the entire length of the feature whilst it's pushed together. The tanks can also be placed further apart to allow for ease of cleaning and because it looks awesome, but I've pushed mine together so it fits in the wall cavity in my home.
[video=youtube;NeaH2pU6ycE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NeaH2pU6ycE[/video]
Instead of bending the Acrylic twice to form an edge-less design, I went with straight standard edges so that the tanks would look definitively separate and so that the light from the rear of the tank would be unobstructed internally; which allows the blue lighting effect to reach all areas of the acrylic. Almost as if the tank is made of light. It also creates a bold contrast against the dark substrate, forming an attractive outline of the feature.
To compliment the tanks I used three clear acrylic clamps, one per tank. These hold the intake and outlet hoses in place. Even though not visible, I wanted the hose connections to look really organized. I used standard hose fittings and clear hose to create a tailored plumbing solution, the outlet from the canister filter splits into a T, flowing into each side tank. I used a nozzle on the outlet to act like a power-head, and it gives me incredible surface agitation without creating too much aggressive water movement throughout the tank. The inlet is simple, and is located centrally in the center tank. I've since added a small hang-on filter to the center tank to allow for additional surface agitation, works beautifully and cant be seen!
An important part of this aquarium is the background art. I altered a very high resolution image to suit my application and printed it on Static Cling stock, which is typically used for window displays and advertisements etc. It allows me to have a semi-permanent product applied to the tank which won't fade, be damaged by water and will remain completely flush with the acrylic. This has equated to an incredible effect inside the tank, the lighting and the aquascape also further compliment the background art; with warmer light hitting the 'sunset' horizon and the tanks blue light filtering into the lower portion of the aquarium. Before printing, I edited the image and reduced the blue saturation and heightened the greens so that the background trees dint become blue martian trees.
Water changes are easy. I have a tap water conditioner hidden away in a compartment which I hang into the left hand tank and gravity feed the water out from the right tank. This allows the entire aquarium (fish bridge included) to be flushed out once or twice a week, roughly a 35% change each week. I would do it more often, but with no ammonia, no nitrates, incredible oxygen and a 8-1 hourly filtration ratio the tank virtually sustains itself.
This is the finished aquarium as of a couple of weeks ago, I've made several changes since then. I wanted to create a true landscape, some optical illusions and encourage the tank's inhabitants to be more active. They spend lot's of time in the fish bridge and often move from tank to tank, which is cool because every time you look at it the fish have moved locations. Except for the bottom dwellers, they've staked out their homes and spend their days cleaning the tank for me. The canister filter is a 800LPH Ehiem Classic, which I've added a crystal clear water bag too because the wood was tainting my water with a yellow tinge. There is also an inline water heater on the outflow line which maintains a constant 28 degrees. Lighting consists of a single 40w on the top hidden behind the fish bridge, it has a warmer color to highlight the sunset. The other is a 20 watt blue, which is mounted behind the aquarium. In the ceiling above is a set of 80w high power led spot lights which are directed towards each side tank to fill in the gaps.
So far I have perfect water conditions which are stable and it's repetitively heavily planted considering the floor size being only 270 Square Cm. It's slightly overstocked, yet to no ill effect because i'I've chosen compatible community fish which each have a different preferred zone in the aquarium, top mid and low. The inhabitants are very active, explore often and play with each other happily. There's no predatory presence, thus no stress that I've been aware of.
The whole project hasn't been that costly, sure with what i'd spent I could have bought a much larger glass tank; but it just wouldn't have fit my requirements. I'm happy with the finished product, it's the type of aquarium you can look at for hours and hours and never get bored. Plus, It given our home a wow factor as people enter through the front facade and see it glowing at the end of the hallway. I was originally worried about in being hard to clean, but it's an absolute breeze. Water change takes less than 10min and a service clean taken just less than an hour, which i've only had to do once. There's just no algae build up and the water flow in the tank forces most of the bad stuff into the filter vs the substrate or the tank surface.
Well, that's all I can think of writing for now. I'd greatly appreciate your feedback!!!
PS: I'll do another video soon, the aquascape and tank stock have been dramatically improved since.
Thanks!!!
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