the filtration is a 18" Lacron sand filter and a 18000s Sequence pump in a small shed outside with a load of insulation.
here's the pic's, bloody loads of them















Uploaded with ImageShack.us

Uploaded with ImageShack.us





























Hope you like it

Kev
Is that a L14 or L48? (I think that's the right number)kev wrote:Not sure what else is goin in there yet, thinking about some Geo's or maybe a Asian aro
Kev
Not to high jack but interesting comment. Why do you think this is Larry? I have had many species of plecs spawn on my bottom rows. Temperature?apistomaster wrote:In fact none of my fish breed well on my bottom rows so I use them for fry grow out and not breeding or display.
having it so low was a risk but now that its in im very happ with the look. once you plonk yourself down on the giant beanbag infront of it its perfect hight, even now as i sit on the couch looking over at it it's a perfect hight.apistomaster wrote:I have built some large all glass tanks using 1/4" plate glass so they where never more than 90 gallons but had similar proportions.
I was always pushing the limits of the thickness of glass I could afford so I used some of the same methods but not all.
I have always used what what Mats called the "floating base" but otherwise my tanks also had the top longitudinal stiffening strips and a center cross brace glued underneath the long strips and the front and back.
I discounted the cross brace's butt joints' strength between front and back panels and relied more on the tie in with the long stiffening strips. It always seemed like the best way to distribute the loads over more area.
I preferred a floating bottom and never felt comfortable with the side connections to the bottom pane being subjected to the shearing forces from the outward water pressure nor the concentration of vertical loads along the edges of the bottom.
I once built a 36" tall tank out of 3/8" glass and laminated a piece of 1/4" glass for the bottom pane plus added laminated two more 1/4" X 2" strips along the bottom and front and back panes to increase the total surface area at every bonded structural connection. Each main structural joint was 3/8" + 1/4" + 1/4" so the bond width was 7/8".
Of course if the glass is thick enough you can make just about any design work.
It is an impressive tank just a bit low to the ground for me. My larger tanks usually contain wild Discus and plecos. Discus would not be happy so low to the ground. In fact none of my fish breed well on my bottom rows so I use them for fry grow out and not breeding or display.