vfc;3007305; said:Same concept applies to a car. If you drive over a 3" brick, the shocks compress and the car frame around the wheel only moves up a small amount. If you weld your shocks (tank with no foam) and run over a 3" brick. The side of the car will be 3" higher and the frame under a severe twisting force.
OK, we will use your example.... Even with working, non-welded shocks, the corner of a car will still lift off of the ground, hence twisting force. Foam may help this, but it will not solve it. If shocks solved the problem 100%, you would never feel any bumps. The bumps are still there, minimized, but still there.
Also, monitoring the status of your tank should be a regular occurance. If you running high volume tanks, I would hope that you are checking. If you first fill it up and it is not level, drain it and fix the problem. If you notice that it is off level 6 months down the road, drain the tank and fix the problem.
Foam is not the solution. Foam may but a warm fuzzy temporary fix to the problem, but what happens with the floor/stand/etc sink even more? The issue is still there and still needs to be address. You have solved nothing by using foam, just possibly bought yourself a little more time.