jimmy40741
Member
I don't mean to sound discouraging, but I don't see how this is going to work with the way you have it drawn out (if you plan on having the tank where the bottom is above your television). You state that your closet is 65 inches tall, and if the light switch is say 35 inches off the floor then that only leaves you 30 inches to play with. If you had a tank built that's only 18 inches tall then that only leaves you 12 inches above the tank, and that is definately not enough room to do maintanence on a 36 inch tank front to back.
If you can move your TV someplace else then you have a pretty nice set up to do an in the wall tank. I think that you will probably have to have the tank made since I don't think a 48x36 footprint tank is real common. But you could have a 48x36x24 built and that would be approximately 180 gallons (close to what you want). And I would think that would be enough room to have a sump under it (like a 40 breeder) and enough room above for your lights and to do maintanence.
If I were you, at this point I'd grab a tape measure and decide what size you want your tank to be allowing sufficient room above and below the tank. Then use an online aquarium size calculator to figure up the gallons and weight. Remember to add to the weight since your sand and live rock will weigh more than the amount of water it is displacing. Then have those figures handy when your contractor comes by so he'll know how much weight you are talking about.
If you and your contractor decide it's do-able, then your next step would be deciding what size you want everything to be and start looking at ordering what you need.
If you can move your TV someplace else then you have a pretty nice set up to do an in the wall tank. I think that you will probably have to have the tank made since I don't think a 48x36 footprint tank is real common. But you could have a 48x36x24 built and that would be approximately 180 gallons (close to what you want). And I would think that would be enough room to have a sump under it (like a 40 breeder) and enough room above for your lights and to do maintanence.
If I were you, at this point I'd grab a tape measure and decide what size you want your tank to be allowing sufficient room above and below the tank. Then use an online aquarium size calculator to figure up the gallons and weight. Remember to add to the weight since your sand and live rock will weigh more than the amount of water it is displacing. Then have those figures handy when your contractor comes by so he'll know how much weight you are talking about.
If you and your contractor decide it's do-able, then your next step would be deciding what size you want everything to be and start looking at ordering what you need.