🧴 Aquarium Silicone Amount Calculator
Estimate seam length, bead volume, waste, and cartridges for reseals or new tank builds.
| Bead Size | Triangular Area | Approx ml per meter | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4 mm | 8 mm² | 8 ml/m | Nano tanks, light reseals |
| 6 mm | 18 mm² | 18 ml/m | 20 to 55 gallon internal seams |
| 8 mm | 32 mm² | 32 ml/m | 75 to 125 gallon internal seams |
| 10 mm | 50 mm² | 50 ml/m | Tall, wide, or rimless builds |
| 12 mm | 72 mm² | 72 ml/m | Very large custom tanks |
| Tank | Dimensions L×W×H | Typical Glass | Suggested Bead | Estimated Cartridges |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 Gallon | 20×10×12 in / 51×25×30 cm | 3 to 4 mm | 4 mm | 1 reseal cartridge |
| 20 Long | 30×12×12 in / 76×30×30 cm | 5 to 6 mm | 5 to 6 mm | 1 cartridge |
| 40 Breeder | 36×18×16 in / 91×46×41 cm | 6 to 8 mm | 6 mm | 1 to 2 cartridges |
| 55 Gallon | 48×13×21 in / 122×33×53 cm | 6 to 10 mm | 6 to 8 mm | 1 to 2 cartridges |
| 75 Gallon | 48×18×21 in / 122×46×53 cm | 10 mm | 8 mm | 2 cartridges |
| 125 Gallon | 72×18×22 in / 183×46×56 cm | 10 to 12 mm | 8 to 10 mm | 2 to 3 cartridges |
| 180 Gallon | 72×24×24 in / 183×61×61 cm | 12 to 15 mm | 10 to 12 mm | 3 to 4 cartridges |
| Mode | Included Seams | Best Use | Allowance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reseal | Internal or external fillets | Removing and replacing visible beads | 10% to 20% waste |
| New Build | Structural bonds plus fillets | Assembling panels from bare glass | 15% to 25% waste |
| Rimless/Heavy | Larger fillet and structural gap | Tall, wide, or braceless aquariums | 20% to 30% waste |
| External Only | Outer cosmetic/support bead | Supplementing outside seams only | 10% to 15% waste |
Calculating the correct amounts of silicone is always a necessary process in both new build and reseals of aquariums. While the majority of individual focuses upon the glass and the aquarium stand, the silicone is a critical component of aquariums that prevent the aquarium from leaking. Should you calculate the amount of silicone incorrectly, you may either have to purchase additional silicone to complete your aquarium build, or you may have purchased too much silicone for your need, which wastes your money.
The total amount of silicone that you will require for your aquarium build will depend on a few different variable. Variables to consider include the length of the seams that your aquarium will have, the size of the silicone bead, the thickness of the aquarium glass, and the amount of silicone that may be wasted in the building process. Additionally, consider the type of build mode that you plan to use in building your aquarium; reseals will require less silicone than builds in which you must apply silicone to the side of the aquarium.
How to Calculate Silicone for Your Aquarium
Rimless tanks will also require more silicone than framed tanks due to the additional weight that the rimless tank silicone will have to support. Another important variable is the size of the silicone bead. The larger the diameter of the silicone bead, the more silicone that will be required.
For instance, increasing the diameter of the bead from 6mm to 8mm will require nearly double the amount of silicone for each meter of aquarium tank seam. Thus, larger beads will require much more silicone than smaller beads. Additionally, the thickness of the tank will also require changes in the amount of silicone that you must purchase; thicker tanks will have wider gaps between the panel of the tank, requiring more silicone to fill these gap.
Another important variable to consider is the amount of silicone that will be wasted during the building of the aquarium. Regardless of how well you plan your build, you will waste some of the silicone in cutting the nozzle of the silicone cartridge, tooling the tank beads to make them smooth, and in the small amount of silicone that will remain in the cartridge after you are done pouring silicone into your aquarium. A 15% allowance for waste is typically used in estimating silicone need, but 25% may be required for rimless aquarium build.
Round up to the next whole silicone cartridge to ensure that you dont run out of silicone prior to completion of your build. The total length of the seams of the aquarium also play a major role in the total amount of silicone that will be required. Bow front aquariums have longer seams than rectangular tanks of the same size.
Aquariums that is in the shape of a cube have a different number of seams along the bottom of the tank in comparison with the vertical seams than rectangular tanks. Therefore, accounting for the shape of the tank will allow you to ensure the accuracy of your calculations regarding the length of seams that must be treat with silicone. If you dont account for the shape of the tank in your calculations for length of seams, the calculations for silicone will likely be incorrect.
Some of the most common mistake made by those who wish to purchase silicone for their aquarium are either only measuring the length of the seams of the aquarium, or forgetting to include the external silicone bead when building a new aquarium. Both the internal and external seam must be accounted for in your calculations. Using a silicone calculator will allow you to ensure that you purchase the correct number of silicone cartridge for your needs.
By using such a calculator to determine the amount of silicone for your aquarium build, you can avoid purchasing the incorrect amount, either too little silicone or too much silicone. It’s important to recieve the right amount so you dont have to go back to the store. You should of checked the seams length carefully.