mojoreef said:
Walter that sounds awesome. A huge project for sure. Natural lighting should be a problem, Look into something called Sona tubes. They are perfect for that kind of application.
I've seen photos of Sonatubes. It's a good concept and what we're planning to do is a skylight which is basically a very large Sonatube. It will have an iris that will let me control the light intensity should it actually be too intense (unlikely in our climate and at our latitude) as well as letting me insulate the tank from the skylight during our cold (-45F) winter nights. For us the latter is the greater concern. The house will be earthsheltered and the skylight will be the major vertical penetration in the center.
mojoreef said:
start another thread and we can feed you info. I can also get some folks tha thave large tanks to come over and share their experences.
I'll do that. I look forward to feedback from y'all. I am far behind Barry. Things are still in the design stage. I don't want to rush the tank. We may build the house around the space for the tank getting it all prepped this year if things fall in place and then build the tank in the winter and next year.
I have sooo many questions for Barry (and others) and am reading his notes with great interest. Our projects are amazingly similar in many ways. We're both working with reinforced cement, large water volume, I'm incline towards tempered glass (and have many questions on that) and we're both using natural lighting for the tank. I feel grateful that Barry is blazing a trail and that I stumbled on his path!
Barry, can you tell me about your choice of the 30mm tempered glass?
What were your considerations and why did you go with tempered glass?
I had assumed I would go with tempered and have been reading about glass. My one big concern with tempered is catastrophic failure dumping thousands of gallons of water into the house. Being paranoid I'm designing the house to withstand such an event.
Is the "partially tempered" glass you are using somehow less prone to the catastrophic failure? I've not come across a good explination of that term although I've seen it before.
I've also read about laminated glass - and failures of that type of glazing per Adey in Dynamic Aquaria. Did you look at other types of glazings and if so what were your reasons for rejecting them?
Glass is something I've worked with a lot. Most of my experience has been with 1/4" and 1/8" plate glass in much smaller tanks. Acrylic is something I've worked with a little and while I'm not as comfortable with it as glass I can make it perform.
The biggest reason I'm inclined against acrylic because I've seen a lot of very scratched up acrylic tanks. Algae embedded in the scratches looks oh-so nice. Not. I've also read that acrylic yellows with age although I've never seen this.
What I would really like is Scotty's transparent aluminum. (Star Trek reference for those who missed the movies.
)
Did you silicone your glass in place? How much? Did you gasket it with neoprene or anything else? I'm thinking of doing a gasket around the RC cement edge of the window frames and under the glass to protect it from the guaranteed roughness of even the best concrete and then silicone between and around. One concern is vast amounts of silicone not curing in the middle.
I'll soon be starting on a 0.1% model and then later a 3% size model to work out some ideas. We're in mud season for perhaps the next month or two so no real construction for a while.
On the barrels you're looking at using, I would be incline to look for food grade plastic barrels rather than the metal ones. I try to keep metal away from the salt water as it seems that eventually it fairs poorly. I use plastic barrels in lots of projects and they're great to work with. Easy to cut and drill and they often come with two tapped holes in the top in sizes from 5 to 60 gallons (19 to 227 liters).
On your concrete, what did you use for water proofing? Last summer I did tests with a number of materials which are additives and spray on coatings for concrete but I haven't settled on a choice yet.
Your photos and descriptions are great. Keep them coming!
Cheers,
-Walter
in Vermont
Speaking of gallons and liters, feet and meters, what standard do people prefer for postings on this forum or does it matter?