this might be kind of dumb but is there anywhere else you can put it first floor perhaps? that might hold better cause having the tank fall thru the floor would be a costly mistake
Im not missing the point, im simply saying if properly engineered there will be no tank through the floor!
12 Volt Man;4486110; said:do you mean properly engineered as is? or do you mean post aquarist reinforcement?
I doubt the tank will fall through either, even though there isn't a normal residential wood floor in the land that is designed to hold that kind of weight for a period of years without movement with normal floor joists and spans..
it will likely hold.
but it certainly could sag over time, which is not good.
with proper reinforcements, there should probably not even be any sagging I would think. beef up the floor big time!![]()
tickle;4486257; said:I mean after reinforcement, we are in agreement
@OP
You will have to check your local builders merchant for the cost of RSJ's, they can be pricey for longer ones.
At those spacings Doubling 2x6's may be adequate, although tripling the joists may be needed for the safety threshold you may desire in a family home and to safeguard the distortion 12 volt is detailing.
Tomorrow i will both get the opinion of both my uncle (employer and builder of 30+ years) and relay the information onto a builders trade forum for the regulation nerds to quibble over.
In the mean time it may be worth pricing up 2x6's and the relevant RSJ's.
For pricing sake's purely;
It sounds like you should be lying on 6 joists with a 7ft tank at those centres, i'd replace 3 with RSJ's if you where to go this route (every other to distribute weight.)
Or, double/triple all six joists.
Planetnicolas;4485921; said:this might be kind of dumb but is there anywhere else you can put it first floor perhaps? that might hold better cause having the tank fall thru the floor would be a costly mistake
Im pretty confident it will hold