| ARTICLE INFORMATION: Author: Jay Luto Title: DIY Background ala "Back to Nature" Summary: Jay uses styrofoam pink insulation, silicone, epoxy, food colouring, and a bit of sand to amazing effect. Contact for editing purposes: theo@aquarticles.com email: jayluto@hotmail.com Date first published: 2003 Publication: http://www.greenstouch.com Reprinted from Aquarticles: |
ARTICLE USE: Internet publication (club or non-profit web site): 1. Credit author, original publication, and Aquarticles. 2. Link to http://www.aquarticles.com and original website if applicable. 3. Advise Aquarticles Printed publication: Mail one printed copy to each of: Aquarticles.com |
DIY Background ala "Back to Nature"
Back-to-nature background is probably the most wanted item in the aquarium
hobby. The only problem that keeps hobbyists from buying those, almost real, backgrounds
is unfortunately price. Price ranges anywhere from $200-$600. Can everyone afford them?,
No. But there are ways to go around that huge 3-digit figure and make one of those
backgrounds yourself. I made this small background for my 10 gallon Lake Tanganyika tank
using items available in your local hardware stores.
Side view of cut pieces of pink styrofoam glued together with silicone
To glue styrofoam I used GE RTV108 series silicone. There has been a lot of discussions
on which silicone to use and which could be toxic to your fish. Here is the quote from GE
company. I was able to find GE RTV108 for $5 in my local hardware store.
"Aquarium manufacturers have used
RTV108 in fresh and saltwater aquariums up to 20,000 gallons.
I purchased regular black dye from grocery store, mixed it with West System Epoxy and painted entire model. I noticed that epoxy had burning/melting effect on styrofoam and initially rough edges changed to nice and smooth shapes. I did 5 coats using dye + epoxy mix to securely cover entire model. To remove epoxy glaze, I sprinkled play sand over entire model. I repeated epoxy and sand step few times to achieve final effect and rock texture.
Note how the epoxy melted the rough edges of the cut styrofoam
Another view of the styrofoam covered with expoxy
Styrofoam with expoxy
Styrofoam with epoxy
I soaked entire background in water for few days. I think the epoxy layer was not thick enough because the dye started to fade. Despite some bumps and side-effects, final outcome was very pleasing.
Tank ready for filling
Tank ready for filling - side view
Tank with sand, ready for water
Tank filled with water
Tank filled, cured, and ready for fish
|