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stu stu is offline
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Default Home made rain water tank


"AussieRich" wrote in message
oups.com...
On Oct 18, 4:46 pm, "stu" wrote:
"AussieRich" wrote in message

oups.com...



On Oct 18, 9:49 am, "
wrote:
On Oct 17, 9:07 am, " wrote:


plastic would appear a better cheaper option, there was a tv show
dream house? a new home built in denver on the side of a hill,

with no
water service they had a room for a plastic water tank with

regular
deliveries.


plastic never rusts leaks etc plus must be cheaper


I know some people are under the impression that plastic lasts
forever... but it gets brittle and eventually cracks. I was

removing
a sink today to install granite counter tops and the brittle plastic
piece which connects to the stainless steel broke off on me instead

of
unscrewing. I stored a lot of old mail rubber-banded by date and

when
I went to go through it years later to throw 99% of it out all the
rubber-bands had broken by themselves. The rubber hoses in your car
eventually leak. Ultraviolet also causes many plastics to fall
apart. Many plastics are even slowly eaten by microbes. While
plastic is a miracle of "modern science" and the best choice for

many
many applications it is normally not a good idea to count on it
lasting longer than concrete, stone, or metal which was properly
designed and maintained. I do not know if it is the right choice

for
the OP's application, perhaps it is. It is probably the cheapest.


Picture of "attractive" concrete


tank:http://www.oasisdesign.net/images/im...38rockTank.jpg







picture of the type of tank I am talking about


http://www.talesfromthebox.com/wp-ga...rden/tank2.jpg


These things are an australian icon and take on a second life when
rusted out as wood sheds, cubby houses, dog houses, chicken sheds etc
etc.


My existing tanks have a polymer film applied to the inside called
'Aquaplate' which protects the metal from the effects of electrolysis.
The manufacturers of this steel "BHP" gaurantee itl for 25years.


You can buy this stuff in sheets so I am really thinking hard about
having a crack at it.


Also, does anyone know if solid rivets are much stronger than 'Pop'
rivets.?


I cant see how you can roll corrugated iron without a set of "corrugated
iron rollers". You can make tanks out of flat sheet but you said you

wanted
it to match what you have already. Also moving and supporting a tank

made
out of flat sheet is more work.

Solid rivets are stronger in sheer and tension than "normal" pop rivets.

If i was making a DIY water tank i think i would use a plastic lined

hole
and put some sort of decking over the top.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

Hey,

You can buy the iron already rolled to what ever specification or
profile you want. They just charge a little extra to roll it.

I'll probably go with solid rivets as due to the round shape of the
tank the steel is in tension and all the rivets would most likely be
needing to have good shear strength.


Rich


If you can get the corrugated iron rolled to the diameter of your tank then
you're half way there. I thought you were going to start with flat sheets of
corrugated iron.

As for the rivets, although solids will make it a two person job, if you
have the tools I'd just copy the size and spacing on the tanks you have
already(as long as your new tank isn't going to be much bigger).

You'll need to join three (4 sheets if you can only get 900mm) flat sheets
to make the top and bottom(if you can get them 3.5m long, ) do they use some
sort of lock form joint or just a lap joint??

What sort of joint are you going to use on the top and bottom?