GLASS VS. ACRYLIC

MUNDY

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Jan 13, 2011
30
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0
Sôuth Africà
Im in thé same boat as you. Will be moving into a house sôon & am wanting to build a 650/700g tank into thé wall. Brick, marine ply, epoxy. Thé question is, is that glass will be awésome but you gonna pay, but will last a lîfe time. Acrylic will be cheeper but im worried about the long term results (scratching cleaning) etc. Mabe bite thé bullet & bend thé plastic..?
 

chonhzilla

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Dec 26, 2007
1,970
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Fresno CA
From my personal experience with both glass and acrylic tanks, I would always go with glass from now on. Though I do own a 65 gal (36"x24"x18") acrylic and a 225 (72"x30"x"24) acrylic currently. My main reason is scratches, it's just way too easy to put a mark on it. I own numerous scratch repair kits and polishes. My next tank or tanks after these will be glass, I'll deal with the weight and no the headache of dealing scratches.
 

Cablemonkey

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
May 10, 2011
149
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Everton, MO
One thing I havent seen mentioned is the different types of acrylic, such as abrasion resistant acrylic which... obviously... is designed to withstand most scratches.
 

Mikeyy

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Aug 28, 2010
197
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......
juanynfante;5049082; said:
I never use acrylic, i have a 180 glass tank, i live in a project apt, the floor is concrete, my tank is really heavy but in the near future i want a bigger tank, like 350 or 400...in my opinion it will be to heavy for the apt(3 floor)...so i think about acrylic, the weight of the acrylic will help me set up my tank easily and i will be able to get it into my apt...thats why i prefer the acrylic for a big tank setup but if i move into a hause i think i will get a glass tank....any suggestions about my opinion ?
When determining the appropriate size tank for a 3rd story apartment the weight of the actual tank is peanuts compared to it being filled with water. Acrylic or glass the difference when its filled is not much comparitively. if a 400 gallon glass tank is too heavy filled than a 400 gal acrylic will be too.
 

Jake95

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Mar 29, 2011
133
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NJ
i prefer acrylic to glass, its lighter, clearer( unless you go with starfire, but thats $$$) holds in heat better, cleaner edges with no silicone or anything, so easy to drill, has ALITTLE give to it, so unlike glass if your stand is alittle un-even, it will flex and not crack like glass would. and if your carefull, you shouldnt have any scratches.
 

madrezz

Jack Dempsey
MFK Member
Jul 3, 2010
549
12
33
JKT-INA
need an advice, i'm trying to build 380 Gal, better use glass or acrylic?
and maybe more info about calculating method.
thx
 

JiggaJay96

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Jul 17, 2011
19
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Queens
cooooooooooooooooooool
 

TenecorTanks

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
May 13, 2010
12
0
0
Phoenix
Hi,

Just wanted to drop some input to clear the air about glass vs. acrylic.

1) Acrylic scratches. Yup. We can't really deny that. But on the flip side, it comes out easily. There is a reason it is used in public aquariums where little kids are scraping against it all day. Acrylic can be buffed out, and made to look brand new again. A scratch repair kit is easy to come by as well.

2) Acrylic is lighter than glass. Yes, by about half actually.

3) Acrylic insulates better. This is one that almost no one ever mentions. An acrylic aquarium will insulate 20% better than any glass aquarium. Doesn’t matter if you have cold water fish, but for a tropical tank, this is a pretty big deal.

4) Acrylic has almost the exact same refraction index as sea water. That means that there is no bending of light as it passes from the acrylic into seawater, providing brighter color and sharper shapes in acrylic aquariums. Even starfire glass has a small amount of iron in it, which gives it a bluish hue. Regular glass will have a green hue to it. Acrylic will virtually disappear if you drop it in water. We have a piece here at the factory that we show new employees. We drop it into the tank and see if they can find it. Pretty fun game actually.

5) We don't have silicone seams. Acrylic is chemically bonded, so the seam basically becomes a part of the acrylic itself.

We will give glass what it deserves though, for smaller applications it is the easier way to go. But for big jobs where you want something that looks absolutely perfect, yeah, acrylic is the way to go.

Just our thoughts at Tenecor
 

GabeA185

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Jul 11, 2011
108
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0
Fresno
I hear that acrylic tanks also hold temperature a lot better than glass tanks do. This means that keeping the temperature regulated in an acrylic as apposed to glass is a lot easier. I prefer an acrylic over glass just from what i've heard and researched.
 
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