Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I wonder how often this is a factor in seam failure? This is why I am extremely hesitant to buy a used tank. The seams may be great sitting in their living room, but moving it through their house, loading it onto a truck, driving twenty miles, unloading it off the truck and moving it into my living room. Will the seals that have already aged still be up to the task after that?Yes an aquarium glass/silicone will inevitably fail . It usually takes decades. Honestly I’ve had seen them go 30+years easy . Generally the bigger the shorter its life . Just because more weight more water pressure. And moves can be tough on a large aquarium. Like one person, not lifting evenly like say his right side is stronger than his left side, and it makes twisting forces on the aquarium. I have a 20 gallon that I’ve had since I was a child and it still holds water and I’m 57 .
Thats why i add some extra silicone every time i buy a tank, no matter where its from.I wonder how often this is a factor in seam failure? This is why I am extremely hesitant to buy a used tank. The seams may be great sitting in their living room, but moving it through their house, loading it onto a truck, driving twenty miles, unloading it off the truck and moving it into my living room. Will the seals that have already aged still be up to the task after that?
Wouldn't water pressure be purely height with total volume being irrelevant? For example, that 20 being only 16" tall would have similar water pressure regardless if 200 or 2000 so long as all tanks were 16" tall. My understanding of why taller tanks require thicker glass. Akin to diving the ocean and atmosphere pressure.Yes an aquarium glass/silicone will inevitably fail . It usually takes decades. Honestly I’ve had seen them go 30+years easy . Generally the bigger the shorter its life . Just because more weight more water pressure. And moves can be tough on a large aquarium. Like one person, not lifting evenly like say his right side is stronger than his left side, and it makes twisting forces on the aquarium. I have a 20 gallon that I’ve had since I was a child and it still holds water and I’m 57 .
No. Volume matters. The pressure according to depth is pounds per square inch. If you double dimensions of a rectangular piece of glass, the pressure goes up times four.Wouldn't water pressure be purely height with total volume being irrelevant? For example, that 20 being only 16" tall would have similar water pressure regardless if 200 or 2000 so long as all tanks were 16" tall. My understanding of why taller tanks require thicker glass. Akin to diving the ocean and atmosphere pressure.
Over many years, ive seen the major reason being a tank out of level. I know a few people with 20-30 year aged tanks with zero leaks and some with failure in the first year *we know what tanks these are).Will a glass tank with silicone seals eventually fail?
What are the warning signs of an all out catastrophe?
The vast majority of the strength is in the thin layer of silicone in the joint, not the bead over the joint. Moreover, fresh silicone does not adhere well to cured silicone, you are not really adding much in the way of strength.Thats why i add some extra silicone every time i buy a tank, no matter where it’s from.
No. Volume matters. The pressure according to depth is pounds per square inch. If you double dimensions of a rectangular piece of glass, the pressure goes up times four
I would never, ever, ever buy a used tank again. Ever. My used tank purchase went sideways in 6 months, leading to a 2 or 3 day adventure (tank swap) I'm not willing to endure again.I wonder how often this is a factor in seam failure? This is why I am extremely hesitant to buy a used tank. The seams may be great sitting in their living room, but moving it through their house, loading it onto a truck, driving twenty miles, unloading it off the truck and moving it into my living room. Will the seals that have already aged still be up to the task after that?
That’s what I thought.That is not how the math works, pressure is a function of the water column height, not the volume.
12” tall by 12” wide tank is 144 sq/in
6” tall by 24” wide tank is 144 sq/in
6” tall by 6” wide tank is 36 sq/in
The 12” tall tank exerts twice the pressure on the seams as the 6” tall tanks. Both 6” tall tanks have the same pressure on the seams.
You can hold the entire ocean back with with a 1/4” thick 6” tall piece of glass the length of the Atlantic cost if you could manufacture it.
The total size of the aquarium does matter. The force acting on the glass is area-dependent. The bigger the area, the more force acting on that pane of glass and the seams. The bigger tanks need thicker glass to avoid any deflection in the glass, as this would lead to seam failure. Rimless tanks need thicker glass because there is no outside bracing, so any deflection will affect the seam even more. Braced tanks can have thinner glass because the seams are supported by a brace, not just the silicone.That’s what I thought.
I think people are interchanging force and pressure…. And that may be where the confusion is coming from.The total size of the aquarium does matter. The force acting on the glass is area-dependent. The bigger the area, the more force acting on that pane of glass and the seams. The bigger tanks need thicker glass to avoid any deflection in the glass, as this would lead to seam failure. Rimless tanks need thicker glass because there is no outside bracing, so any deflection will affect the seam even more. Braced tanks can have thinner glass because the seams are supported by a brace, not just the silicone.
You are correct; water pressure is depth-dependent, but you have to look at the total hydrostatic force acting on the glass. It's not as much the volume of the tank as it is the size of the glass pane.