patsan19
Active member
yeah.. I guess a snorkel kit would be required. LOL
Glass does sound more interesting now...
Glass does sound more interesting now...
...... I build custom tanks for a living and nothing under 500g these days. .....Forget solvent cements for thickness over 1" due to uniform coverage. Solvent i.e WO #3, #4, &16 or McBond (methylene chloride and glacial acetic acid to slow down evap rate) I mix my own now. 2 part polymerizable cements such as PS30 or WO 40/42 work better and are what is used in the trade when constructing professional grade tanks of this size. Not mass produced inferior grade junk that will craze and turn yellow under UV , warp under MH lamps and bow like the bags fish come in.
I have some cell cast acrylic panels that are 1.25" thick. They are 10FT in length and about 36" tall. Im trying to decide which method to use to bond them. I have made lots of smaller tanks but none with material this thick or panels this long and heavy. Up to this point I have always used solvent cement, but at this thickness Im thinking Weld On #40/42 might be best. Here's where Im confused.
Will #40/42 form as strong a bond as #4 even though its not really a solvent?
Since it's #40/42 and fills gaps, should I bevel the edges of the vertical panels, creating a small gap from the outside bevel. Then fill it in with the cement using a jig to keep it perpendicular. This would create a fillet on the outside that could be routed off.
Using #4 and the pin method, if I let it soak for long enough will the solvent be completely squeezed out of the joint from the weight of the panel after I pull the pins and the panel sinks down or will a long enough set time allow the both surfaces enough time to soften so they mesh together and it wont matter what squeezes out when the piins are pulled?
Confused as to what method and type of cement should be used here.
Thank you
Thank you for your informative input. You certainly seem to have a thourough knowledge of working acrylic and bonding. It sounds like you have a very succesful career manufacturing large acrylic aquariums, that is evident in your understanding of the different solvents and even mixing your own, wow! Nothing beats someone who knows what they are talking about to set the record straight lol.
We used to have another user named Phixer on this forum a long time ago, pretty sure it wasnt you though, he certainly didn't write with your style...
Anyways, thanks again for your helpful post.
Thank you for your informative input. You certainly seem to have a thourough knowledge of working acrylic and bonding. It sounds like you have a very succesful career manufacturing large acrylic aquariums, that is evident in your understanding of the different solvents and even mixing your own, wow! Nothing beats someone who knows what they are talking about to set the record straight lol.
We used to have another user named Phixer on this forum a long time ago, pretty sure it wasnt you though, he certainly didn't write with your style...
Anyways, thanks again for your helpful post.
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