I'm not a lover of ECS tanks because of the way they are made. Instead of using a ram on a billet of steel and swaging the tank to shape as almost everybody else does, ECS starts with steel tubing and then rolls the bottom closed, finally welding it shut. It works, but if you hang a light inside the tank, the bottom where it was welded, doesn't look pretty.
Don't ask me why almost everybody else forms a tank using a differet process and what they know that ECS doesn't know, or what ECS knows that the rest of the world doesn't know. I just know I don't like the looks of the welded spot on the inside of the tank. On the 3L tanks you won't notice it, on the 8" diameter tanks I see it.
ECS used to be named Apolda Stahl shortly after the reunification of Germany, before that it was called Volks-Eigene-Betrieb Apolda Stahl (translates to "Peoples owned Company Apolda Steel" in other words an East German Company owned by the State).
Michael
Don't ask me why almost everybody else forms a tank using a differet process and what they know that ECS doesn't know, or what ECS knows that the rest of the world doesn't know. I just know I don't like the looks of the welded spot on the inside of the tank. On the 3L tanks you won't notice it, on the 8" diameter tanks I see it.
ECS used to be named Apolda Stahl shortly after the reunification of Germany, before that it was called Volks-Eigene-Betrieb Apolda Stahl (translates to "Peoples owned Company Apolda Steel" in other words an East German Company owned by the State).
Michael