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I used silicone and only had 2 or 3 come loose in 7 years.
But it really dose make the tank heavy,
I've seen some information here on the FishBox about haw to make on with styrofoam and a coating of fiberglass.
'Dear Lord,' the minister began, with arms extended toward heaven and a rapturous look on his upturned face. 'Without you, we are but dust ...'
He would have continued but at that moment my very obedient daughter who was listening leaned over to me and asked quite audibly in her shrill little four-year old girl voice, 'Mom, what is butt dust?'
You can get some stuff called "Aquascape" which is like a putty that hardens up nicely. You can just add it to a few spots to hold pieces that didn't interlock. The only issue is that it turns purple which mimics coraline algae in a saltwater set up.
I had an idea reading this thread that may or may not be on topic here, but what about taking a dry tank, lay it on the back, and find some thin or light pieces of flagstone or slate and using silicone, form them in such a way that they would be stable enough or semi permanent, as to when the tank was set upright, and filled with water, you would have a simulated stone wall on the back???
CF
Truth is the cement that holds the bricks and stones of a sane and civilized society together. Remove the former and the latter will crumble.
I think a better question is "what rocks can be stuck together"?
SiliconII will hold together any rock with good "integrity".
I have some strong sand stone that I stuck together about 40 yr ago. I have tried some "flaky" shales that could not be held together; the failure occurs between the rock layers.
I have some fairly soft sand stone (I think from Glen Canyon), I cut it and stuck a few "shelves in a 55 afew years ago (still holding). I have also done that with a strong shale.
I used silicone with petrified wood on the back of a 40g (short 55) and the color matches natural (sandblast) gravel looks great but I did have a couple of pieces that had to be re-attached. Big problem when I went to move it, it weighs a ton.
'Dear Lord,' the minister began, with arms extended toward heaven and a rapturous look on his upturned face. 'Without you, we are but dust ...'
He would have continued but at that moment my very obedient daughter who was listening leaned over to me and asked quite audibly in her shrill little four-year old girl voice, 'Mom, what is butt dust?'
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