12:37 What I did with my stand top because I wasn't willing to get into all the sanding is I flooded the entire thing with 1/4" of tabletop epoxy which is perfectly self leveling. Zero pressure points!
Just a thought, a glass tank should never have plywood or any solid surface under the tank. The bottom is not design to withstand that kind of pressure. The tank could fail in time.
Ik I'm kinda late to watching this vidio. I'm going to do something very similar. I'm getting a 75 gal aquarium, with a 40 gal breeder as a sump with a submersible pump and an hanging over flow running at about 550 gph. I realy like your set up i just wanted to realy go all out and have great filtration
@@jdofishtank6018 Personally, I would have put them in with the sea horses facing each other as if they were sizing each other up or getting ready to mate. Lol.
no cross braces on the end posts? go the the extra mile and fill and sand holes it will look so great or even replace them with exposed bolts for that industrial look
Looks awesome... Once it's painted... Those screws won't be as noticeable.. What I've done to ensure the tanks are as level as possible is put peice foam that the demention of the tank under the tank... So if the wood base has an imperfections of some sore its taken by the foam and not the tank.. Which might cause problems later on..and congrats on the 10K subs... 👍🏼🍻🍻👏🏼👏🏼