John58Ford
Well-Known Member
Usually, we lay a bead of silicone around the bottom pane, then on the two outside panes and stand them all up together, holding them with masking tape, or for heavy tanks you can use corner guides and cabinet clamps. If you get to the point where you can cut a precise -1/16 off 3 sides of the front and rear, and off the bottom of the sides, you can use tile spacers to make sure the silicone is an even thickness and cures evenly. After those initial structural seams cure, we cut any drips with a razor, mask off a border and lay the sealing bead around the inside of the tank, making sure to smooth it quickly and peel the masking while it's wet for that factory or better look. When re-sealing, we only cut that inner caulking bead off using a 90 degree caulking remover/knife, or by very carefully using a straight blade being sure not to cut the structural glue. Then we mask and re-sealSounds like it's still being siliconed..guessing glue is "temporary" to hold in place.
This process is the only way I've seen glass done, I would love a walk through using super glue as a layup assistant as the structural bead can be a chore and set up too fast in a lot of cases.