It ended up not being needed, but thank you very much for the offer.Eric mentioned he was going to get you my large stock tank he’s borrowing, I’m glad you noticed before catastrophe struck.
It ended up not being needed, but thank you very much for the offer.Eric mentioned he was going to get you my large stock tank he’s borrowing, I’m glad you noticed before catastrophe struck.
Glad you got it figured out for the time being! If you need to house anything let me know.Yep, the seam was coming apart. The gap was big enough to allow grains of sand to trickle down into it.
Very much appreciated! @Blaise006 actually had a RSR250 he wasn't using that he's letting me borrow until I figure out next steps. I customized my plumbing, but - thankfully - I had the foresight to keep the stock unions as a connection point and my rockwork is in two large pieces. So we basically just had to drain, disconnect three unions, lift old tank off, put new tank on, reconnect unions, fill. And my rockwork is actually just two large pieces, so it was pretty easy to lift it out/drop it back in.Glad you got it figured out for the time being! If you need to house anything let me know.
What's terrifying to me is that, when @Srt4eric posted my picture on a Red Sea FB for me, one person actually commented they'd had sand and bristleworms living in their seam for quite a while.Damn I never though about that lol, I run bare bottom on my 100gl. It’s not a Red Sea tank, but man, that’s the ultimate sign, is when you get sand in there.
I don't have any more pictures. However, I think there was a very, very thin part of the seam still attached at the bottom, and the edges were holding it in place. Pardon the language, but I was shitting bricks most of the day because I could gently poke the bottom seam underneath the sand and see the sand move up and down, so there wasn't much seam.Can you post a couple more pictures of the seam? I'm still trying to understand how water didn't come out... Was there still part attached? Like an 1/8" strip at the bottom?
Silicone can be pretty amazing stuff lolI don't have any more pictures. However, I think there was a very, very thin part of the seam still attached at the bottom, and the edges were holding it in place. Pardon the language, but I was shitting bricks most of the day because I could gently poke the bottom seam underneath the sand and see the sand move up and down, so there wasn't much seam.
The tank was purchased secondhand from a BAR member, but they were the original owner. I believe it was only 3-4 years old.So was this a new tank? i.e. you were the only owner? I presume any warranty is long past over. But yeah shit like that is making me happy I haven't dove back into the hobby or worse... decided to go for acrylic
Thank you; and I am, too.Glad to hear they are offering a replacement!
Not bad. I would have gone for that too. Hopefully the discount was nice and big!So, (hopefully) final update:
I was informed by the Red Sea rep that they don't sell tanks directly to the public but, since this was a replacement, they were willing to sell me a new G1 RSR250 (tank only) at a significantly discounted rate. After thinking about it overnight, I've opted to go for that, since I'll likely be getting a larger tank in the next 2 to 3 years.
It's just a new exact match for what he has. The 2nd generation of red sea tanks just launched. He doesn't get one of those.What's a new "G1 RSR250"? Is that a Generation 1 RSR250? What's the difference from your current?
so it has the same probability of seam failure?It's just a new exact match for what he has. The 2nd generation of red sea tanks just launched. He doesn't get one of those.
Pretty much.so it has the same probability of seam failure?