» Site Navigation
1 members and 3,404 guests
Most users ever online was 6,337, 01-24-2020 at 04:30 AM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 75,096
Threads: 248,539
Posts: 2,568,733
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
|
-
building own pvc enclosure
ive been considering getting a PVC enclosure for any of my animals really and was wondering if itd be logical/worth it to build one on my own? itd be a few months from now before i have the money anyways but im just looking into it. itd be pointless to build one for my hoggie considering how small shes gonna be anyways
-
-
Re: building own pvc enclosure
If you have building experience go for it. I wouldn’t build one for a hoggie though lol. What other animals do you have that could use a pvc cage?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
1.0 Normal BP
1.0 Mainland Reticulated
1.0 High lines Red Tail Boa
-
-
PVC can be expensive. If you have the tools already and access to a cheap glass company that can cut you glass panels or if you can get decent acrylic instead you can do it for a a decent cost but it would require access to adequate materials and tools.
1.0 ♂ 2010 Spider BP 'Dante'
1.0 ♂ 2017 Bay of LA Rosy Boa 'Queso'
0.0.1 2017 Aru GTP 'Ganja'
1.0 ♂ Blue Tick Coonhound 'Blue'
1.0 ♂ 2018 Basset Hound 'Cooper'
-
-
Re: building own pvc enclosure
SDA said exactly what I was thinking: Better find your source of PVC before starting the project. I work in manufacturing already and could not find ANY company that offers CDPVC (the type that animal plastics uses) for less than $200 for a 1/2" thick 4'x8' sheet (plus freight shipping). I went through this SAME exact thought process before buying my cages though, and I called numerous material providers with no luck. If you can find a company that sells affordable PVC sheets, go for it but after several days of phonecalling numerous material companies with good reputations, I was finding that it is very hard to find and it's expensive when you do. I ended up buying Animal plastics cages.
Good luck.
-
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to KevinK For This Useful Post:
Godzilla78 (01-12-2018),PitOnTheProwl (01-12-2018)
-
building own pvc enclosure
Originally Posted by dylan815
If you have building experience go for it. I wouldn’t build one for a hoggie though lol. What other animals do you have that could use a pvc cage?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
i know, itd be pointless for a hoggie. i still might build her a 20 long replica out of wood cause i like the looks better.. i have a bearded dragon and a redfoot tortoise! itd probably be for my bearded dragon as my redfoot is going outside full time this summer. this is my current beardie tank: id use the same design but smaller if i built one for my hoggie.
Last edited by baldegale; 01-12-2018 at 02:45 AM.
-
-
Re: building own pvc enclosure
Originally Posted by KevinK
SDA said exactly what I was thinking: Better find your source of PVC before starting the project. I work in manufacturing already and could not find ANY company that offers CDPVC (the type that animal plastics uses) for less than $200 for a 1/2" thick 4'x8' sheet (plus freight shipping). I went through this SAME exact thought process before buying my cages though, and I called numerous material providers with no luck. If you can find a company that sells affordable PVC sheets, go for it but after several days of phonecalling numerous material companies with good reputations, I was finding that it is very hard to find and it's expensive when you do. I ended up buying Animal plastics cages.
Good luck.
yeah i was coming to realize the shipping is what kills ya! i do have all the tools though as ive built tanks out of wood before. just wish i had a router.. makes everything look 10x nicer. just going through Animal plastics and reptile basics kinda sucks though due to how long the wait times are.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
-
Re: building own pvc enclosure
To put it in perspective, I have free access to $120,000 modern Haas cnc mills and a $10,000 seat of Mastercam programming software and I couldn't find any reason to build my own with the costs of pvc I was getting. However, you could use plywood and coat the entire inside of the enclosure in epoxy resin....you would never have water problems if you did it this way.
With all the construction time, hardware costs and everything else considered though I just found it to be easier to order from AP.
Last edited by KevinK; 01-12-2018 at 03:23 PM.
-
-
Building vs buying always come down to a few things
Price building your own being cheaper
Your skills
How you value your time
When I first started I build everything myself those days I realize that the saving is not worth my time and the trouble.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Stewart_Reptiles For This Useful Post:
PitOnTheProwl (01-12-2018)
-
Re: building own pvc enclosure
Originally Posted by KevinK
To put it in perspective, I have free access to $120,000 modern Haas cnc mills and a $10,000 seat of Mastercam programming software and I couldn't find any reason to build my own with the costs of pvc I was getting. However, you could use plywood and coat the entire inside of the enclosure in epoxy resin....you would never have water problems if you did it this way.
With all the construction time, hardware costs and everything else considered though I just found it to be easier to order from AP.
That’s what I did for my rack, only I used ¾” cabinet grade oak plywood and waterproofed it with primer and deck paint. Stronger than pvc, almost as water proof, but very heavy.
A LOT cheaper, the shipping costs for pvc sheets is crazy, and I refuse to use melamine as it gets ruined eventually with moisture.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
-
Re: building own pvc enclosure
Originally Posted by Godzilla78
That’s what I did for my rack, only I used ¾” cabinet grade oak plywood and waterproofed it with primer and deck paint. Stronger than pvc, almost as water proof, but very heavy.
A LOT cheaper, the shipping costs for pvc sheets is crazy, and I refuse to use melamine as it gets ruined eventually with moisture.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
yeah ive built 4 wood enclosures now, theyre just extremely heavy and a giant pain sometimes. waterproofing im not too worried about, i use this stuff called “drylok”
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|