Well the inside of the tank is clean and the seams are all free of silicone including silicone residue. When I thought I was finished I decided to polish the inside glass with HD rubbing compound again which has red color that only seems to stick to silicone. So you guessed it I was able to see all the silicone smudge residue I had missed and in the corners and becasue I could see them it was easy to remove with a razor.
So now all 27 feet of the corners are pristine and ready for an alcohol wipe and silicone tomorrow using a tablespoon for the bottom (fat bead) and teaspoon for the corners (small bead).
Originally I was going to leave the corners alone becasue neither my 60, 2-80's, nor my 120 tanks have any inside silicone except for the bottom and top perimeter as they converge all 5 panel joints it makes sense, but the corners should only need the seam seal between the panels to stop any leaks. In fact I read somewhere that placing silicone in the vertical corners only makes it harder to locate a leak becasue water that would normally squirt out from a pinhole at the exact location will instead migrate along the inside added silicone seam and weep so detecting the location is made impossible for an otherwise easy fix.
Even though I know my seams are good in the corners, Im going to go ahead and silicone them with a small bead using a teaspoon so that it will not be so visible taking away that clean look that un-siliconed corners have.
"Jaykit-Awesome work. Crazy amount of work! Wow." I just wanted to make it clear that becasue most of the work was done outside and in the garage, daytime temperatures (100-112) have keep my work on the tank and stand limited to 2 hours in the morning and 2 hours in the afternoon and even then on a leisurely basis, so don't get the idea that this takes that much time. I'm sure if I had an air conditioned work shop, the entire tank work would have taken only 4 days tops so far and with experiences and help as little as 2 day, its not that much work just a learning curve and no room for mistakes.
There are a lot of steps I should have and could have combined like when I installed the bottom I should have been prepared to also silicone the inside seams in one shot, but that is where experiences comes in something I now have. But every step has been a first for me, as will be siliconing and spooning the 27 feet of inside seams tomorrow morning all within 5 minutes before they skin, for the first time. :nilly: