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Used, gift from my parents. I think it's 4 years old.Is it new or used? Like little fox said, Red Sea and bubbles don’t mix.
Used, gift from my parents. I think it's 4 years old.
So probably the G1Used, gift from my parents. I think it's 4 years old.
Gee wonder why they are the world leader selling reef tanks with 10s of thousands of tanks in service world wide. You are clueless to their design and have no expert basis to offer an opinion on their build quality.Definitely don't use it as is. The problem with Red Sea tanks is that they are very poorly designed. You can see it in your tank. Look at the the bottom of the glass panels, specifically the front panel. They have no support because of Red Sea's sleek design. The design looks good but it is not at all structurally safe. So eventually the glass starts to pull away from the seams, causing the tank to bust.
The hanging edge does make me and a lot of people uncomfortable, but if you think about it from a physics perspective, there are two main forces acting on that silicone. The shear force downward of the mass of the pane of glass, and the outward force of the water in the tank.Gee wonder why they are the world leader selling reef tanks with 10s of thousands of tanks in service world wide. You are clueless to their design and have no expert basis to offer an opinion on their build quality.
10s of thousands of hanging edges currently in service world wide. The forces you mention are people blasting their wave maker powerheads against their side walls 24/7. Over time that causes fatigue and may lead to seam failures.The hanging edge does make me and a lot of people uncomfortable, but if you think about it from a physics perspective, there are two main forces acting on that silicone. The shear force downward of the mass of the pane of glass, and the outward force of the water in the tank.
Given roughly 0.43 psi as an average for a two foot deep tank, if the pane is four feet long, that is 24x48 or 1,152 square inches x 0.43 psi = 495 pounds force outward. this is an order of magnitude greater than the shear force downward.
I'm not here to tell you that the floating pane is a good design, I just think we need to re-calibrate our "common" sense given the forces that are at play on the seams of our tanks.
Another issue is that most of the weight is on the 2 upright side panels as the bottom glass eventually starts to sag because the stand wasn't designed properly OR wasn't made with the appropriate materials. I get that Red Sea is the the biggest tank manufacturer, but tons and tons have failed, just on R2R. Imagine all that have failed around the world. No need to argue.Gee wonder why they are the world leader selling reef tanks with 10s of thousands of tanks in service world wide. You are clueless to their design and have no expert basis to offer an opinion on their build quality.
10s of thousands of hanging edges currently in service world wide. The forces you mention are people blasting their wave maker powerheads against their side walls 24/7. Over time that causes fatigue and may lead to seam failures.
That’s ridiculous. If this is the case, then why aren’t we seeing this happening with each and every other brand?
Common sense is key here.
Red Sea has a problem.