Acrylic Tanks?

Hurley

aka Bunny13
Oct 2, 2005
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Baltimore, Maryland
www.freewebs.com
I have only dealt with glass aquariums and I have been very happy with them but I am looking to get a bigger tank and I was wondering what is the deal with acrylic tanks? I understand they are lighter. Do they scratch easily? Anything I would need to worry about?
 
it scratches easily and you have to be sure to get a nice one( usually high priced)
becareful when you clean the tank like scraping off the algae, if you use razor you might scratch it..
 
I have a 125 gallon acrylic and have learned the following:
- if you buy a scrubber that's for acrylic only, you just have to be careful that you don't pull up a piece of gravel when you're rubbing the sides, or the gravel will scratch the tank.
- acrylic is a better insulator than glass, so you will need heaters that provide less than the 5w per gallon that's enerally recommended - mine came with (I bought the entire setup from somebody who was moving) a 350w heater, which is about 2-3 watts per gallon and it's been fine, although 2 smaller heaters makes more sense for redundancy, etc.
- I think the structure is a bit different from a traditional glass tank. Think about a closed rectangle that's 6 ft L x 18" D x 20" H. Then, cut two rectangular holes in the top, and hold onto the pieces you've cut out and use them as lids. That's what I have. So, I could never use a HOB filter, since there isn't anywhere to put in the tubes, etc., since the cutouts are right in the middle of the top. I have two canisters that sit in the stand below the tank, and all of the tubes, light cords, heater cords, etc., run through a "box" like think that has been formed into the tank and runs through a hole in the bottom of the tank.
- I've had trouble with light fixtures, since there is only 5 feet of usable space on the top of the tank, because of the construction I've described above.

FYI, this was not a DIY. The tank was purchased this way by the original owner.

I can take a picture and email it to you, if you want.

Ruth
 
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Acrylic takes alot more elbow grease to get the algae off. Most planted tank experts use glass. I have one of each, and my next tank will be a Euro-glass.
 
I might have a very unique point of view on this topic...

I actually own a tiny 3g Acrylic Eclipse tank which at some point in time
developed about 3-4 tiny hairline cracks near the bottom. Nothing
too serious, it never started leaking or anything.

Then I purchased a 12g Acrylic Eclipse tank. Very nice design. Very
clear and not heavy at all. After about 3-4 weeks it developed a couple
of tiny hairline cracks near the bottom (again) which started to get
worse and leak within 24-36 hours. Towards the end, I was losing about
1 1/2 gallons a water every 3 hours. I rushed home from work, bought
the exact same tank, moved everything over and... the tank just developed
the same hairline fractures tonight. They leaked about a drop of water
every 5 seconds. While watching TV for about 2 hours it got worse.
I just checked on the tank and the cracks grew to about 5 inches length,
going upwards. I just removed half the water to relieve the pressure and
guess what I'll be doing tomorrow...

Ok, maybe I'm just simply the unluckiest guy in the universe when it comes
to acrylic aquariums, or it's a combination of Eclipse Aquaria and myself...
who knows?

BTW... does anyone know of any good aquaria with a bio wheel, which aren't
made by eclipse?
 
Alestro Bakai said:
I might have a very unique point of view on this topic...

I actually own a tiny 3g Acrylic Eclipse tank which at some point in time
developed about 3-4 tiny hairline cracks near the bottom. Nothing
too serious, it never started leaking or anything.

Then I purchased a 12g Acrylic Eclipse tank. Very nice design. Very
clear and not heavy at all. After about 3-4 weeks it developed a couple
of tiny hairline cracks near the bottom (again) which started to get
worse and leak within 24-36 hours. Towards the end, I was losing about
1 1/2 gallons a water every 3 hours. I rushed home from work, bought
the exact same tank, moved everything over and... the tank just developed
the same hairline fractures tonight. They leaked about a drop of water
every 5 seconds. While watching TV for about 2 hours it got worse.
I just checked on the tank and the cracks grew to about 5 inches length,
going upwards. I just removed half the water to relieve the pressure and
guess what I'll be doing tomorrow...

Ok, maybe I'm just simply the unluckiest guy in the universe when it comes
to acrylic aquariums, or it's a combination of Eclipse Aquaria and myself...
who knows?

BTW... does anyone know of any good aquaria with a bio wheel, which aren't
made by eclipse?

hmm.. what or where is ur tank standing on?
if its always developing cracks on almost the same spot then maybe there's a chance that the weight distribution of the tank on its stand ain't balanced or something like that.. off topic sorry :hang:
 
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