Sealent

Post pictures of your beloved catfish aquaria here. Also good for pictures of your (cat)fish rooms or equipment discussions. If you are posting pictures of identified catfish, please do so in the appropriate husbandry and reproduction forum above.
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mitch
Posts: 51
Joined: 04 Jan 2004, 17:45
Location 1: London/Kent, England

Sealent

Post by mitch »

I am doing my homework as I am thinking of buildind an indoor pond for my larger fish, but i don't want to only be able to view them from above.

Does anybody know of anytype of sealent avalible in the uk that would seal glass to a pond liner?

The more surgestions the better.

Cheers
kev
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Joined: 04 Dec 2003, 22:28
Location 1: Lancashire
Interests: Catfish and Stingray's

Post by kev »

how about making it out of fibre glass, i and my friend have made big tank's using it, and put window's in. i dont think your gona be able to seal glass to a liner without making a frame for it all to sit against.

Kev
Put me dinner in the oven, im off to the Xingu!!!.
mitch
Posts: 51
Joined: 04 Jan 2004, 17:45
Location 1: London/Kent, England

Post by mitch »

I am aware i'll need a frame, but wont i need a frame for fibre glass as well?

If its possible to use a liner it would be good as it could be dismanteld if/when i move.
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MatsP
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Post by MatsP »

mitch wrote:I am aware i'll need a frame, but wont i need a frame for fibre glass as well?

If its possible to use a liner it would be good as it could be dismanteld if/when i move.
You obviously need a frame either way, unless you make the fibre-glass very thick, and I think most people would agree that a fibre-glass coat on top of (for example) plywood "base" would be the best way to go.

The problem with a liner is to make sure that it's securely sealed to the liner, and I think you'll find that this is not trivial. It's much easier (yet not EASY) if you have a smooth/hard fibreglass surface than a plastic liner.

If you feel that you have to dispmantle it, I'd recommend that you use fibre-glass, and make it such that you can dismantle frame that holds the fibre-glass. Perhabs if you use a liner between the fibre-glass and the framework, you could remove the framework, and redo the fibre-glass... But I would probably just see it as a "once built, never torn down"...

[Note: I have no experience in building tanks this way, I'm just suggesting things from a theoretical understanding of the subject].

--
Mats
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WhitePine
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Post by WhitePine »

Cheers, Whitepine

River Tank with Rio HF 20 (1290 gph), Eheim 2236.
- Apon boivinianus, Bolbitis, Crypt balansae, Microsorum Windelov, Vallisneria americana, Crinum calamistratum, Nymphaea zenkerii, Anubias barterii.
mitch
Posts: 51
Joined: 04 Jan 2004, 17:45
Location 1: London/Kent, England

Post by mitch »

Cheers for the links, they have some good info.

Have a look at the indoor pacu tant in this link, this is the sort of thing i had in mind because my garage stays fairly cool even in summer. So i am also thinking of keeping running cost down. But I'ld want a veiwing window.

http://www.anythingfish.com/images/Ted/ ... rIndex.htm
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