I'd be curious about that as well, but also the specific kinds of failures.I’m wondering if anyone would be willing to sign a petition to Res Sea (and the other tank manufacturers, to be fair) asking them to release their tank failure statistics. I think all manufacturers should do this so we know what risks we’re taking by putting a tank in our homes.
I suspect that Red Sea has a very low rate of failure but because they are an extremely high volume vendor you will see some public examples of tank failures. I would be interested in how many of the failures happen after a tank has changed hands vs original owner so we also know if there’s a different risk for used tanks (it could go either way - a “proven” used tank that’s held water could be more reliable or the extra stress of moving a used tank might have impact).
I agree with both main points- that it would be good to have failure rate data as opposed to anecdote only, and that Red Sea sells more rimless tanks than anyone else so seeing more of them fail doesn’t give you the info you actually need about failure rate.I’m wondering if anyone would be willing to sign a petition to Res Sea (and the other tank manufacturers, to be fair) asking them to release their tank failure statistics. I think all manufacturers should do this so we know what risks we’re taking by putting a tank in our homes.
I suspect that Red Sea has a very low rate of failure but because they are an extremely high volume vendor you will see some public examples of tank failures. I would be interested in how many of the failures happen after a tank has changed hands vs original owner so we also know if there’s a different risk for used tanks (it could go either way - a “proven” used tank that’s held water could be more reliable or the extra stress of moving a used tank might have impact).
I have a gen1 RSR750, which was supposedly the most likely of all models to fail. I bought it new when they were first released several years ago. No issues so far for me. Though I’ll admit I get nervous when I see threads like this (which is why I don’t go looking for them!)
Sure didDid you install that middle post they sent out after the issue was identified?
While I agree with would be great, if it's a self reported statistic then it really becomes something everyone would take with a grain a salt, since there most likely would be punishment if they purposefully under reported, and more importantly no way to verify if they are in fact under reporting.I’m wondering if anyone would be willing to sign a petition to Res Sea (and the other tank manufacturers, to be fair) asking them to release their tank failure statistics. I think all manufacturers should do this so we know what risks we’re taking by putting a tank in our homes.
This should actually be stronger. The forces on that seam are pushing out, not down. Your silicone and most silicone failures occur at the bond between the silicone and glass as an adhesion failure, vs the silicone itself ripping. The more surface area you have bonded for the seam, the better. The RedSea tanks use thinner glass on the sides then the bottom, so with the side panes, you get more surface area for adhesion bonding to the edge of the bottom pane then the edge of the side pane.In addition to the other points people have said, I'd wonder if their decision to let the front pane hang over the stand is a contributing factor. (Picture for reference.)
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Interesting; hadn't considered that perspective. My thoughts on that would be, then, that this points more towards a manufacturing/construction defect of some kind, given that seam delamination is a consistent point of failure in spite of the extra adhesion bonding.This should actually be stronger. The forces on that seam are pushing out, not down. Your silicone and most silicone failures occur at the bond between the silicone and glass as an adhesion failure, vs the silicone itself ripping. The more surface area you have bonded for the seam, the better. The RedSea tanks use thinner glass on the sides then the bottom, so with the side panes, you get more surface area for adhesion bonding to the edge of the bottom pane then the edge of the side pane.
It's entirely possible, and anything we argue about is speculation at this point. Likely only Red Sea has the actual numbers, and—even if we were to have access to that data—it might be difficult to get an accurate picture given secondhand ownership, moving the tank, etc. That said, my gut feeling is that,The front pane floating is the same way ELOS tanks were built. I do think there likely is a big correlation to failure and second hand tanks. Especially rimless tanks. And I doubt the failures are as wide spread as it seems since Red Sea sells so many tanks.
Thank you for succinctly putting why my experience with their support has soured me on them so much. I recognize they don't have a legal obligation to help, but I didn't feel like it was that big of an ask for a price break of some kind to give their systems another chance.The fact that they seem unconcerned when you showed them your seam failure is shocking and really disappointing, because it implies they aren’t as concerned about safety as I want them to be, and that this is common enough that it doesn’t raise eyebrows. It should be so rare and urgent that they want to fly out their engineer to examine the tank first hand and learn from this, plus offer you a big discount on the newest safest version of the tank.
I do wonder if their answer would be different if you were the original owner of the tank.Thank you for succinctly putting why my experience with their support has soured me on them so much. I recognize they don't have a legal obligation to help, but I didn't feel like it was that big of an ask for a price break of some kind to give their systems another chance.
I wonder if second owner is different than first owner that has moved the tank before?I do wonder if their answer would be different if you were the original owner of the tank.
That isn't something that red sea would know though.I wonder if second owner is different than first owner that has moved the tank before?
Most likely.I do wonder if their answer would be different if you were the original owner of the tank.