I got a 10ft tank!

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BigJim

Aquarium Advice Addict
Joined
Jul 8, 2009
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Location
Oak Forest, IL
I've been casually looking to upgrade my 29g to something in the 125g -180g range with the intent of setting it up when my wife and I move out of out apartment, which hopefully is going to happen in the next 6-8 months. My brother decided to speed things up by finding a tank for me. My brother is into big snakes and was offered this tank for his snakes since it was cracked. He doesn't have anywhere to put the tank in his apartment, so he offered it to me, and I'm a sucker for free stuff that I can fix, and it was free, as long as we got it out of the guy's garage by last Saturday.

I kept bugging my brother for details about the tank, specifically the dimensions, so I could decide whether I needed to rent a bigger truck than my Ranger. He originally told me that the tank was 96"x36"x27", which would have been great, since I have about 8ft of bed length in my truck with the tailgate down. I get a call Friday afternoon: "The tank is ten feet long and it's made of 1" glass." I'm thinking "Oh great! Now I have to find a truck at the last minute, and just how the heck am I going to find enough people to help me carry this thing?", and my brother is telling me that the owner moved it with a truck with a 6ft bed, so I figured I'd give it a shot with my truck.

Saturday rolls around and I've got my dad and the brother that started all of this recruited to help me move the beast. I'm flying by the seat of my pants at this point. I don't know where the tank is located. I don't know the extent of the damage to the tank. I'm not even sure of the tank dimensions, or that it will fit in the truck! (We ended up using my dad's Ranger so that I didn't have to take the tonneau cover off my truck.)

After a lot of phone tag, we finally made it to the guy's house to get the aquarium. It's in his garage and it's filled full of junk. Once we emptied it, I started thinking that maybe I bit off more than I can chew. I was almost certain that the 1" glass was an exaggeration. I had never heard of a tank that was only about 2 feet deep having 1" glass. The tank was every bit of ten feet and the glass was 1" thick. On top of that, the tank was heavily eurobraced and reef-ready with a huge overflow built out of 3/4" smoked glass.

One end of the tank was already up on a furniture dolly. We lifted up the other end, placed another dolly underneath it, and rolled it to the truck. The four of us were able to lift one end up to the tailgate, then slide the tank into the truck bed. A good two and a half feet of tank stuck out past the end of the tailgate. We decided that there was no way three of us were going to get that tank anywhere but off the truck, and especially not up to my brother's second-floor apartment or my third-floor apartment. It would have to go to my parents' first.

We took the side streets through Joliet back to my parents' house in Orland. The looks we got while driving were priceless. No one would pull within 10 feet of the tank.

For storage reasons, I figured I'd dismantle the tank sooner rather than later. I thought a few razorblades and an hour should be enough to cut through the silicone. Boy was I wrong! I've found a whole lot more appreciation for silicone and it's adhesive properties.

First, I had to get all this decorative black plastic off the edges so that I could get to the seams. That killed an hour by itself. Several of the seams were too tight to get a razor blade into to cut the silicone. First the end braces came off. They weren't too difficult. Then an end came off with a little more effort. The center brace proved to be the most difficult to remove. After wasting an hour trying to move it, I finally gave up and started cutting the back panel loose. Gravity was the hero of the day. The back panel came loose and dropped a couple inches, which spread the seams on the top brace enough to get a blade in.

The front came off rather easily after the center brace was removed. The end with the overflow proved to be a real bugger. The seams were too tight to cut and the overflow prevented the side from being twisted off. My dad finally used a 2x4 to lever the seams wide enough to cut.

Five hours, fifteen utility knife blades, three wooden shims, and a putty knife later, the tank was reduced to panes of glass. Currently, they are resting on the side of my parents' house because that's as far as my dad and I could carry the big panes. They will be hibernating in my grandmother's garage until I find somewhere to set up the tank.

My wife (Sara) is actually excited about the tank. I think she's getting addicted. Here is her idea:

Sara: "I want neons."
LFS: "Which ones?"
Sara: "We'll take the whole tank. Maybe that tank too."

Sorry for the ridiculously long post. I'll try to get some pictures here and I'll definitely post when I'm repairing and setting up the tank.
 
Wow, that is great. But we need pics now. :)

By the way, i did the calculations and it is about 405 US gallons. My dream tank. If you ever get rid of it please shoot me a PM.
 
very nice... i agree with etunes on several things... definately need some pictures of it... you have to do a build thread, start to finish, pane by pane, tube of silicone by tube of silicone. Also if you ever get rid of it, im closer, so you can give it to me :)
 
So was any of it broken? You mentioned in the first part about a piece being cracked or something, but you didn't say anything after taking it apart!
 
So was any of it broken? You mentioned in the first part about a piece being cracked or something, but you didn't say anything after taking it apart!

Can't believe I missed that part. The end by the overflow is cracked and the front has a crack that's about a foot long down in one corner. If I can get a piece of glass for the end at a reasonable price, I'm going to shorten the tank just enough to cut out the crack in the front pane.

I'm thinking final dimensions of 96"L x 28"W x 24"H for a volume of about 300g.
 
Lucky, was it a craigslist find? Maybe I should look other then the west and nw burbs for gear.
 
The ironic thing is about this whole thing is that he now has this 300g tank is about putting neons in it. I would put some monster fish in that beast. Just something that made me laugh.
 
Way to go!! I actually live in Joliet too (small world eh) and if you know of anymore big tanks people want to get rid of let me know!! Also you got to post pictures! Are you really going to put neons in?

kee
 
Holy cow! 10ft long! I can only dream of the possibilities for a tank like that!! Def need some pictures
 
Lucky, was it a craigslist find? Maybe I should look other then the west and nw burbs for gear.

No, it wasn't a Craigslist find. It was a my brother bought a snake from a guy who knew this guy who had a wife that wanted her garage back find.



Cool story, did you get any pics of the beast?

My mom took a couple of pictures, but they're on her camera. I'll try to get them soon

The ironic thing is about this whole thing is that he now has this 300g tank is about putting neons in it. I would put some monster fish in that beast. Just something that made me laugh.

Way to go!! I actually live in Joliet too (small world eh) and if you know of anymore big tanks people want to get rid of let me know!! Also you got to post pictures! Are you really going to put neons in?

I'm not sure what I'm going to put in it yet. I'm fascinated by the Amazon biotope tank at the Shedd Aquarium and I've never seen a really big tank set up with little fish before. My wife is just starting to get into aquariums and she doesn't really care for the big fish. An arrowana or a red tail cat crossed my mind, but I'd like to keep my wife happy and interested. Makes justifying my expensive hobbies a heck of a lot easier. Neons might be a little small, but a school of scissortail rasboras might work.
 
Sweet find, my 10g tank wall (12 tanks total 10 were free) came from the same situation, a friend of a friends wife was raving mad over them being in her house for 10 years empty so his loss was my gain, great score man. Your find perked the wifes ears.


PM me on some DW, ill get pics of my find later when I go rip the rest of the tree out of the ground. Lets just say its a very perfect example of Northern Illinois Manzanita.
 
I agree that a big fish tank with a bunch of small fish would be cool, the thought is just funny. A 9 foot tank with a neon that gets .5 inches. Thats ALOT of neons.
 
No i want it but i live in Australia so yeah i dont think im going to fly there. I love neons i think thats a great idea maybe some other fish like a black ghost knife fish a beautiful fish and oscar maybe just some segguestions
 
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