Project:Fish Cages

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Revision as of 10:26, 30 December 2020 by Lukas (talk | contribs) (completed)
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Floating Fish Rearing Cages

Fishcage0.JPG
Status: worked fine, but not needed in the end
Release Date: January 2019
Initiator: Lukas
Materials Used: acrylic glass tube, PLA, XPS,
plastic mesh ("VS-Monodur PA 250 N")
Tools Used: bandsaw, 3D printers, laser cutter
Software Used: Tinkercad, Slic3r, Inkscape, Visicut
Approx. Cost: approx. 3 € apiece


When rearing fish larvae in a regular aquarium, many factors reduce their growth and, ultimately, survival. In addition, it's hard to monitor the larvae when they can spread out and hide, but I wanted to be able to inspect them under a microscope during the first two weeks while still having them in beneficial flow-through conditions with well aerated water.

Commercial rearing cages do exist but are quite expensive (I needed 10-20!) and had the wrong dimensions for my use case in the laboratory.

Acrylic Glass Tube

  • 60 mm OD, bought as 1 m stock
    • first attempt: 100 mm OD (did not fit into some lab glassware with all parts assembled)
the tube was cut with a quickly built bandsaw sled for safety & accuracy


3D Printed Bottoms

  • snap-fit ring to hold a fine mesh we had around for similar purposes
  • low-poly circle in Tinkercad may actually be beneficial for this purpose - bit more room for error?
  • inside rings seemed easier at first, but appeared to allow fish to get trapped in small "pockets" between low-poly ring and round tube -> switched to outside rings
  • designed to be about right (ID = tube OD + 1 mm), but final fitting had to be tried with small adjustments in Slic3r (P4/P5: 100.4 % scale)
  • 20 % infill, 0.3 mm layers


Floaters

The floating rings at the top were laser cut out of XPS and fitted quite nicely after just two or three rescaling rounds.

laser cutting the floaters


Postprocessing & Assembly

After all the parts were made, some additional steps became necessary: besides the obvious "cut the mesh and squeeze it in place", the floaters had to be washed to get rid of the laser stench and the (bottom) bandsaw cuts hat to be cleaned up for a better seal.

Failed Designs

The initial plan was to glue the mesh directly onto the cut face of the acrylic tube, but I did not know the material of the mesh (probably a non-gluable plastic) and therefore failed quickly.


I also made a "mesh wall" prototype but quickly discarded this approach because it required silicone caulk for assembly. Therefore, it was messy to assemble and basically non-recoverable (i.e. properly cleanable/repairable) without any noticeable benefits.