Okay I finally read through this entire beast of a thread! Thank you so much to all of the contributors to this; I'm still waffling over whether building an acrylic display tank is financially feasible for me (physically? Heck yes!) I have been taking extensive notes with direct links to specific posts in any case so that I don't need to wander this thread looking for answers again.
But I have some questions that I'm hoping to clarify:
First question: are the joint cuts supposed to look like this:
Or like this?:
Somehow your great photos haven't worked for convincing my silly brain how the joints are cut.
Second question!
What the heck does 'CNC' stand for in regards to routers?
Third question!
Is this a good source of acrylic in Canada?:
https://plasticworld.ca/product/0000-clear-acrylic-cast/
I cannot for the life of me figure out what brand this acrylic is, mind.
Fourth question!
Since it's been some time do any of you have opinions on the brand Optix? I only ask because this brand is pretty common in stores here. Mind you, not in specialty plastic stores but in Home Depot and Rona (which I understand probably means that it is trash to be avoided.)
Fifth question!
Before I found this thread, I, like many other DIY hobbyists went searching for answers on the mystical and degenerate platform known as Youtube, infamous for its poor advice. There I found the channel LushAqua, where the channel owner used, instead of solvent...
cyanoacrylite aka super glue to glue his acrylic aquarium together.
While I fully intend to use Weldon 3 or 4 instead (especially because my 1.5 years of reefing has rather definitively taught me to never trust cyanoacrylite,) I can't help being morbidly fascinated by this dude's use of it. Does cyanoacrylite actually weld acrylic? Does it bind acrylic better than it does other substances?! (Because as we have established I have developed a very poor opinion of cyanoacrylite's binding capabilities.)
In any case, thank you again so much for this literal treasure trove of knowledge, it's been really fun researching this topic!