? Is 65gal. Too Much For Floor

shawnlx86

Member
I Was Wondering If 65gal 36"l X 18"d X 24"tall Would Be Too Much Weight For The Floor. There Is Also A 25gal Sump 90lbs Sand And 70lbs Of Live Rock. It Will Be Running Perpendicular To Floor Beams On Outer Edge Of House.
Any Thoughts?
 

ameno

Active Member
depends on what shape you floor is in, but you should be fine, being on the outside edge most of you weight is up next to a load bearing wall. Whish is the strongest part of the floor. My floor is made up of 8" 2X4s at 16" o.c. and I have a 80 gal. hex w/100+ lbs of rock, a 6 gal sump and right next to that a 8' slat pool table. No problem with the floor but with that I'm probably pushing the limit. your total weight should not be but about 1000 lbs.
which should be ok.
 

sw-newbe

Member
I have a 55 with 80# of LS and 90# of LR. The tank actually runs parrallel to the beams but it's against the outside wall. It's been fine. I checked in the basement at first just to be sure and there's no deflection at all.
 

salty tank

Member
if it is running perpendicular to the beams than you should be ok. Min is running parrallel with the beams because it was the only place to put it.
 

birdy

Active Member
unless you have a really really old house with problem floors then you should be fine.
I have seen some really big tanks on the second floor of houses with no problems.
 

mdog30001

Member
It will probably be fine. THink of it this way, if your floor can hold two fat people, than you'll be fine. Thats what are architect for are house told us when we asked him about are 120 gallon.
 

newfishguy

Member
They would have to be really fat. A 120 gallon tank is probably over 1000 lbs. Salt water weighs 7.5 lbs per gallon. Plus, add the lr, ls, skimmer, etc. Easily over 1000 lbs.
Originally Posted by mdog30001
It will probably be fine. THink of it this way, if your floor can hold two fat people, than you'll be fine. Thats what are architect for are house told us when we asked him about are 120 gallon.
 

dougai

Active Member
o your fine i currently have my setup in my finished attick(dont know if the rest of the country call it an attick, us bostonians are weird)
 

newfishguy

Member
Wow. Nobody seems to be really worried about this. :notsure: I was going to put floor jacks or something under my support beams in the basement. I'm placing it perpendicular to the joists.
I've got a 75 gallon tank that will weigh around 900 lbs.
Couldn't this heavy of a tank cause a problem over time?
 

scubadoo

Active Member
newfishguy said:
Wow. Nobody seems to be really worried about this. :notsure: I was going to put floor jacks or something under my support beams in the basement. I'm placing it perpendicular to the joists.
Wood Floor Design Loads
In the United States the minimum design floor live loads are usually stipulated in pounds per square foot (psf) by either state or local building codes. An example of typical design live loads might be 200 or 150 psf for a storage warehouse, 100 psf for a public meeting room, 50 psf for an office and 40 psf for a single family residence. So, your home most likely has the capacity to safely support a uniform live load of at least 40 psf. But keep in mind that this design live load is theoretically spread uniformly over the entire floor from wall to wall throughout your entire house. It is not a maximum load on any given area of the floor, it is just a theoretical average load that is used to design the floor for loads that are initially unknown. Some people find this confusing because in reality it is not the floor pressure (in psf) that matters at all, it is the floor load in pounds that really creates the stress in the primary structural framing members.
 

scubadoo

Active Member
Go into your basement and look up at the floor joists. Wherever the joists span the shortest distance will be the room with the strongest floor framing and wherever the joists span the greatest distance will be the weakest room in the house. (Assuming identical size joists) So the next best location is in the room that has the strongest floor.
Well maybe the strongest room is the kitchen and you don't want to put the aquarium there. So, the best practical position is often as close to a bearing wall or column as possible and oriented perpendicular to the floor joists. That way the aquarium weight is distributed to as many floor joists as possible. And the closer to the wall the aquarium can be positioned the more total weight in pounds the floor joists can support. An aquarium stand with a continuous runner at the bottom will distribute the weight a lot better than a stand with just four legs.
Just keep in mind that if your aquarium is in the living room then the columns and walls supporting your living room floor are below you in the basement. Some of the walls in your living room might be partition walls and not bearing walls at all. It is important to distinguish which is a bearing wall and which is a partition wall.
And that leaves the worst possible position for an aquarium which is parallel to the joists in the mid span of the joists in the room with the longest joist span. There are probably several partition walls that run parallel to the floor joists in the house so don't assume that just because the aquarium is up against the wall that it is necessarily near a bearing wall or column.
Structural framing might be designed for this theoretical uniform 40 psf but it probably doesn't reflect the real world loading conditions in any room of your house. The most likely way for a residential wood floor to fail would be because of excessive shear stresses or excessive bending stresses in the floor joists. So let's say I have a 125 gallon tank and the All-Glass web site says that it weighs 1400 lbs and is 6 ft long. The aquarium is oriented perpendicular to the joists and my floor framing is wood joists spanning 12 ft. So this 6 ft by 12 ft portion of the floor was designed to safely support a total live load of at least 6 ft x 12 ft x 40 psf = 2880 pounds total and may actually be much stronger than that, as discussed above. (And keep in mind that this 2880 pounds includes the weight of any people, furniture, bookshelves etc that are located in that 12 ft x 6 ft area) Does this have much value to you? Yes, but only a little bit. The bending stresses and the shear stresses are distributed much differently due to a large concentrated load like an aquarium than they are when distributed uniformly. Aquariums located close to the wall generate high shear stresses and very low bending stresses. Aquariums located in the middle of the span generate extremely high bending stresses and much lower shear stresses at each supporting wall. But you know that it was easier to break that pencil by bending it, so up against the wall is still the preferred aquarium locatition
Another characteristic of wood is that sustained loads can cause permanent deflections and deflections that increase over time. This "permanent warping" of the wood is called creep. So, if the floor deflects 1/2 inch when you set up your aquarium and you leave the aquarium in the same spot for years that deflection might increase to 3/4". Then when you remove the aquarium you may find that some of that deflection has become permanent. That is why in some older homes the floors are no longer perfectly level.
Article is by Kevin Bauman..do a google search for the rest...I cannnot link to it. THE BEST ARTICLE for understanding tank placement and the engineering.
 

scubadoo

Active Member
Article is called......... Residential Wood Framed Floors
and Aquarium Weights
by Kevin Bauman (StructureGuy)
 

tripleshot

Member
If its not on an outside wall or directley over your main beam. I would say put some support 65 gal tank is gonna probley be close to 900lbs with everything. Better safe than sorry.. cheaper to spend 30.00 now than hundreds later to fix big hole in floor. And to replace tank..
 
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