ichthyoid;596217 wrote: This is one time we may</em> not agree. If a tanks not level to begin with, a layer of foam may not be able to correct the offset. However, 'compliant' (ie-to have 'give') foundations help distribute uneven forces. It is a fundamental engineering technique. I have used foam by itself on smaller glass tanks, and 'sandwiched' between layers of plywood on larger ones. I also extend the foam beyond the edge of the tank frame, as this eliminates 'rolling'.
On the other hand, my O'Dell 55 sat for 30 years with nothing but 1/2 inch plywood under it. It should also be noted that plywood itself has some degree of compliance, as well. I am not a fan of 'chip board' for supporting a tank, either.
They just don't make things like they used to!
One of the reasons that silicone rubber adhesives work so well is that they are highly compliant materials, whereas glass is not.
FWIW- 'glass' is not a solid at all, but a highly viscous liquid. I know, that's hard to imagine but true. This was discovered when panes of stained glass windows from middle age's era cathedrals were found to be thicker at the bottom, than the top. This showed that they had 'flowed' downward from the effect of gravity over hundreds of years. This has since been shown to be fact via modern rheological testing, x-ray anlysis, etc. Metal impurities may be added to glass to form 'Crystal', which IS a solid.
The problem with glass is when you have a significant change in force over a small area. You may call it concentrated force if that helps envision it, but in the end that condition creates 'shear'. Shear forces are the enemy of high modulus materials, which include both glass and plastic (acrylic) tanks.
Panels of acrylic or glass detaching/leaking are an <u>adhesion failure</u>-IMO. This result may have been agrivated by shear forces, but in the end the 'joint' failed, NOT the core/'bulk' of the material itself. Material 'bulk' failures are usually more 'catastophic' in their manner of failure (cracks, breakage and shattering). Of course if the entire perimeter of the joint fails and the panel hits the floor and shatters, it would be difficult to assess the mode of failure without a microscopic evaluation of the joint portions. In the end, a good material analysis will reveal 'the smoking gun'. -JMHO