Here's the rub...on the east coast ANY big tank (over 50 gals) you're gonna pay, glass or acrylic. Covid and post covid has made pricing a monster. Yeah a big glass tank is cheaper but only to a point, once you go past the 125 standard. Plus (1) I gotta pay someone to move the sucker and (2) I gotta pay someone to take away all the wood crate/nails. So any tank savings are lost.I understand most of the advantages...and disadvantages!...of acrylic tanks as opposed to glass. I just checked our local supplier, who sells glass tanks that are made on-site at his warehouse, and he lists in stock 110-gallon glass tanks, made of 1/2-inch glass, 48 x 18 x 30 inches, at a price of $435Canadian...currently about $320US. Tack on a few bucks to build to your non-standard but similar dimensions, and I'm sure it would still be well under $500Canadian.
I have several tanks made by these folks; they are beautifully made, with perfect bubble-free joints and interior beads that are absolutely consistent and even. I spent several years in my teens working for a glass-tank builder who was an absolute OC fiend when it came to building tanks, and these locally-made ones are every bit the equal or superior of his hand-crafted gems. They are quality goods, not cheap crap
But...they're just boring old glass, without the high-techie "look" of acrylic (and, of course, without the looming specter of scratches resulting from not much more than harsh language...) and they are heavier.
I gotta ask: is lighter weight (on an object that will be moved likely once...into your house) and the look worth spending 4x or 5x as much cash for acrylic? What's the appeal?
I mean, you're saving money on things like meat thermometers for your water...but paying four times the money for the tank? It seems to me, just from perusing the tales of woe here on MFK, that acrylic tanks seem to suffer from at least as many structural and leakage problems as glass tanks...in fact, I'd guess even more.
Yeah, I know...I'm cheap.
With the acrylic I can move it myself plus the wrapping I can dispose of in a normal manner. I don't have to wait on anyone to help. I moved the 125 acrylic myself from the garage no problem...my brother helped me get it on the stand holding other end.
For example the 225 glass was marginally cheaper than acrylic. I wanted complete open access at the top for large deco. So I paid $400 for four dudes to put it on the stand from the distributor and then another $275 for a hauling company to take out all the huge nails and crating.
It's even hard to find the 150 boxy 4ft tanks the big box stores (Petco, Petsmart) used to sell. And you would still have to haul that out of the store yourself too.
Small glass tanks online are a waste of money and overpriced. People on craigslist and the like want you to buy the tank, all their old crusty stuff AND their fish. And then they want brand new prices, LOL.
Anything shipped for glass or acrylic you're gonna pay freight past 50 gallons. Nobody much will ship smaller glass tanks anyway because a lot of them get smashed up. You could go to Petco or Petsmart for a better deal. I think Amazon will ship larger glass (Marineland) but that's hit or miss being busted up.
To give you an idea of sourcing materials now...a company I did buisness with before (Michigan) would do custom assembled and breakdown angle iron stands holding up to 300 gallons. They're not doing that now because of scarcity of metal!!!
And in Cali people are just dumping big tanks right and left but they don't ship. So...what's their market? More locals dumping tanks?