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  #11  
Old 03-11-2014, 04:22 PM
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^ any idea the price?
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  #12  
Old 03-11-2014, 05:04 PM
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It's not cheap. Somehwere around $200 US is what I have read. It is made by reefsavvy. You would have to email them and find out. I believe it comes with all bulkheads, etc as well though.
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  #13  
Old 03-11-2014, 05:23 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mark View Post
believe the plan is just one large single notch to get the water out, not making individual teeth
Yes thats the plan. Just your typical external overflow where you have the box mounted externally and a notch or slit cut into the tank to allow the water to flow into the overflow box.

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Originally Posted by lockrookie View Post
Sent pm I have notched glass and made overflow teeth on both my tanks as long as glass is not tempers and you have patience and don't rush the cuts it's definitely able to be done

Personally I don't like egg-crate and find it breaks easily and rots away faster over time egg-crate is a brittle plastic and just not my fave thing to work with
Thanks Lockrookie, PM sent!

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Originally Posted by Spyd View Post
Personally, I would go this route:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjL9U6sXI7w

This is the ghost overflow. I think it is a fantastic idea on only requires holes to be drilled instead of cutting out a section of glass.
Thats a really cool idea, too bad they don't make the external box itself taller. Also the cost itself is well above what it will cost for me to just notch or cut a slit in the glass. Thanks for the link
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  #14  
Old 03-11-2014, 05:54 PM
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I like that ghost over flow. Looks pretty sweet and an easy way to add an external overflow onto any tank

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  #15  
Old 03-11-2014, 09:14 PM
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rather than notch have seen similar in idea to the Ghost OF (just holes, no notch).

Piece of glass about 5-6" wide, length the same as the tank for a coast to coast lip. Glass is siliconed at an angle, holes drilled through back glass (no bulkheads needed) and external overflow box constructed.
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  #16  
Old 03-12-2014, 04:24 AM
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Wouldn't fish/snails and such end up in your overflow box with just holes? I was thinking of that earlier.

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  #17  
Old 03-14-2014, 10:37 AM
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I've seen this done before: to cut the notch, you essentially cut two holes as far apart from each other as the length you want the notch to be. Then you use a glass cutter to score the bottom part of one circle to the other, and break away the glass.
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  #18  
Old 03-14-2014, 02:40 PM
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using a dremmel sucks the big one, I used a glass cutter then used the dremmel just to smooth out the cut. you need running water to keep it cool, and you very well might destroy your dremmel, or at least the flexable wand part of it

if I had to do it again I would drill two holes one on each end of the cut out, the using a glass cutter scribe to conect them, bust out the glass and smooth it over.

Steve
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  #19  
Old 03-14-2014, 04:47 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by reefmandan View Post
I've seen this done before: to cut the notch, you essentially cut two holes as far apart from each other as the length you want the notch to be. Then you use a glass cutter to score the bottom part of one circle to the other, and break away the glass.
Thanks for the input. That was my plan with drilling the corners of the notch and then using my angle grinder and a diamond cutoff wheel.

Quote:
Originally Posted by StirCrazy View Post
using a dremmel sucks the big one, I used a glass cutter then used the dremmel just to smooth out the cut. you need running water to keep it cool, and you very well might destroy your dremmel, or at least the flexable wand part of it

if I had to do it again I would drill two holes one on each end of the cut out, the using a glass cutter scribe to conect them, bust out the glass and smooth it over.

Steve
Yea I was starting to think that a dremel would not be the best to use and was considering using a rotozip, then I just realised I have a angle grinder and a diamond cutoff wheel. Yes my plan was to do this on my front lawn with the hose running constant water over it.

Check out this guy using his dremel wand/flexible shaft underwater to do some fragging....

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxeFJ7N7c34
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  #20  
Old 03-15-2014, 03:52 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Trevor W View Post

Check out this guy using his dremel wand/flexible shaft underwater to do some fragging....

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxeFJ7N7c34
well that shaft is toast now...
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