Hello all...
I thought I'd share with you all my latest aquarium project. The wife and I are "upgrading" our 55 gallon N. Pulcher tank to a 90 gallon. As an avid DIY'er, the stand, cabinet, and canopy will all be built by yours truly. The structural part of the stand has been constructed from 1.5" steel tubing and coated with a gazillion (ok... more llike 4) coats of Silver Rustoleum "hammered" metal paint. The cabinet and canopy will be made from solid American Ash hardwood lumber. I must note that I am a bit OCD when working with nice lumber and for this build I have decided that I want to create a "Japanese Style" setup (more on this aspect later).
This will be my second "furniture grade" aquarium project. The first was for our 120 Reef aquarium. I have a build thread for it located HERE
Our current 55 gallon tank is home to a breeding treo of WC N. Pulcher. There are now about 30-40 F1 fish along with the "parents". Here is the most recent pic of this setup:
Another view:
Ok, now that we have the background out of the way, lets move to the "NEW" 90 gallon build. The stand (as mentioned above) is made from 1.5" steel tubing. I purchase all of my steel from Conroe Mill Supply on Davis St. in Conroe. The 1.5" square tubing is sold in 24' sticks. This project used just under 2 sticks (approx 40 feet). At $1.25/ft (which is cheap), it made sense to go with steel vs. wood for this setup. (I paid $2.25/ft. for the same steel back in the spring of 2008 when I built our reef setup). 3/4" Birch plywood was used on the top and bottom of the stand to create both a barrier between the tank and the steel, as well as a "floor" for the filters to sit on.
Here is the stand, all welded up and painted:
Steel stand with unfinished 3/4" plywood:
Finished plywood (end grain painted/sealed with black Rustoleum oil-based paint):
Mounting flanges that will (eventually) hold the hardwood cabinet panels snugly to the steel. These also add "racking support" to keep the stand from failing when its under load:
Ive already completed quite a bit of the Ash hardwood components, however I am a few pictures short at the moment, so I will have to report back with them once they exist!
I thought I'd share with you all my latest aquarium project. The wife and I are "upgrading" our 55 gallon N. Pulcher tank to a 90 gallon. As an avid DIY'er, the stand, cabinet, and canopy will all be built by yours truly. The structural part of the stand has been constructed from 1.5" steel tubing and coated with a gazillion (ok... more llike 4) coats of Silver Rustoleum "hammered" metal paint. The cabinet and canopy will be made from solid American Ash hardwood lumber. I must note that I am a bit OCD when working with nice lumber and for this build I have decided that I want to create a "Japanese Style" setup (more on this aspect later).
This will be my second "furniture grade" aquarium project. The first was for our 120 Reef aquarium. I have a build thread for it located HERE
Our current 55 gallon tank is home to a breeding treo of WC N. Pulcher. There are now about 30-40 F1 fish along with the "parents". Here is the most recent pic of this setup:
Another view:
Ok, now that we have the background out of the way, lets move to the "NEW" 90 gallon build. The stand (as mentioned above) is made from 1.5" steel tubing. I purchase all of my steel from Conroe Mill Supply on Davis St. in Conroe. The 1.5" square tubing is sold in 24' sticks. This project used just under 2 sticks (approx 40 feet). At $1.25/ft (which is cheap), it made sense to go with steel vs. wood for this setup. (I paid $2.25/ft. for the same steel back in the spring of 2008 when I built our reef setup). 3/4" Birch plywood was used on the top and bottom of the stand to create both a barrier between the tank and the steel, as well as a "floor" for the filters to sit on.
Here is the stand, all welded up and painted:
Steel stand with unfinished 3/4" plywood:
Finished plywood (end grain painted/sealed with black Rustoleum oil-based paint):
Mounting flanges that will (eventually) hold the hardwood cabinet panels snugly to the steel. These also add "racking support" to keep the stand from failing when its under load:
Ive already completed quite a bit of the Ash hardwood components, however I am a few pictures short at the moment, so I will have to report back with them once they exist!
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