Evening all, any tips to locating a leak on a fresh plywood build?
Build 12x5x4 tall, stacked 2x4 frame interlocking corners with 3/4 inch plywood and fiberglass in all seams. I used around 7 gallons of max ACR to seal, around 2200 epoxy coated screws and around 10 tubes of silicone for the 11x3x3 panel bondo for all screw holes and ACR thixotropic for fillets.
When I filled for the leak test I had the tiniest of leak in the bottom right zone of the tank that I can't seem to locate.
It is near the glass silicone seam height, the glass panel rest 4.5 inche above floor height of the tank on the 3/4 inch plywood in which is framed around the glass so they're level with eachother. There is no water exit on the opposite side of the panel on the outside.
So far I've emptied and checked for water under silicone, no signs.. I Used 1 sideded pond tape to seal over the panel seem to the plywood from the glass, and refilled to same height and leak was still present at same rate.
I then sanded down the front section on the bottom and the corners and reapplied pond shield to some minor questionable areas and the rest of the front bottom section of the frame, and the leak was still present, I'm thinking it still may be a silicone leak regardless of the pond seam tape being applied.
Part of my original plan was fiberglass and epoxy the where the glass and plywood frame meet, but based off common knowledge you don't typically want to cover silicone.. I'm thinking however in the case of these build with the silicone really just being a gasket for the glass, it would be safe to remove the tape and fiberglass epoxy all the panel seam where plywood meets silicone/glass.. Thought on this?
As a side note Between first and second fills I used red food coloring to attempt to locate point of water exit, but the leak is to slow for that to be effective.
With that being said perhaps, should I try for a complete fill to see if the leak slows or worsens? I feel like that may be an indicator as to wether it's an epoxy leak, or silicone leak due to pressure changes.
I'm really struggling to get this figured out as my basement is currently stripped waiting for this tank to finish the remodel, as it's behind a wall and the end goal is to frame it behind the wall when the rooms is finished.. Time line worsens with our first baby on the way in January and I'm really wanting to be able to focus on family time by then, and this is driving me insane! Lol
Build 12x5x4 tall, stacked 2x4 frame interlocking corners with 3/4 inch plywood and fiberglass in all seams. I used around 7 gallons of max ACR to seal, around 2200 epoxy coated screws and around 10 tubes of silicone for the 11x3x3 panel bondo for all screw holes and ACR thixotropic for fillets.
When I filled for the leak test I had the tiniest of leak in the bottom right zone of the tank that I can't seem to locate.
It is near the glass silicone seam height, the glass panel rest 4.5 inche above floor height of the tank on the 3/4 inch plywood in which is framed around the glass so they're level with eachother. There is no water exit on the opposite side of the panel on the outside.
So far I've emptied and checked for water under silicone, no signs.. I Used 1 sideded pond tape to seal over the panel seem to the plywood from the glass, and refilled to same height and leak was still present at same rate.
I then sanded down the front section on the bottom and the corners and reapplied pond shield to some minor questionable areas and the rest of the front bottom section of the frame, and the leak was still present, I'm thinking it still may be a silicone leak regardless of the pond seam tape being applied.
Part of my original plan was fiberglass and epoxy the where the glass and plywood frame meet, but based off common knowledge you don't typically want to cover silicone.. I'm thinking however in the case of these build with the silicone really just being a gasket for the glass, it would be safe to remove the tape and fiberglass epoxy all the panel seam where plywood meets silicone/glass.. Thought on this?
As a side note Between first and second fills I used red food coloring to attempt to locate point of water exit, but the leak is to slow for that to be effective.
With that being said perhaps, should I try for a complete fill to see if the leak slows or worsens? I feel like that may be an indicator as to wether it's an epoxy leak, or silicone leak due to pressure changes.
I'm really struggling to get this figured out as my basement is currently stripped waiting for this tank to finish the remodel, as it's behind a wall and the end goal is to frame it behind the wall when the rooms is finished.. Time line worsens with our first baby on the way in January and I'm really wanting to be able to focus on family time by then, and this is driving me insane! Lol