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vanreefer
08-04-2015, 05:07 PM
Any structural engineers here that are willing to offer an opinion on a live load (reef tank) in a new house? I have the plans...
Cheers VR

Myka
08-04-2015, 09:22 PM
Big one? :D

sphelps
08-04-2015, 09:47 PM
Well first off it wouldn't be considered a live load, but in any case how big is the tank? Also take what's said here lightly, an engineer is only as good as the accountability he or she offers which on a forum like this is zero.

kamloops_reefer
08-04-2015, 09:58 PM
Call Louise at Roos engineering - she is located in Morgan Crossing.

vanreefer
08-04-2015, 10:40 PM
Tank is a 4' x 3' 180 gal on a main floor above a basement all in about 1900lbs... would be on 3 parallel joists that span 8' between a engineered beam and a tripled 2 x 10 beam. the tank will be sitting 8" away from the wall which is a form wall.
Cheers
VR

sphelps
08-04-2015, 11:06 PM
Oh yeah no worries, a 4 ft tank on 3 joists which only span 8'. Sounds like lots to me so I wouldn't sweat it. I've setup and seen bigger tanks on less.

Myka
08-05-2015, 03:12 AM
Tank is a 4' x 3' 180 gal on a main floor above a basement all in about 1900lbs... would be on 3 parallel joists that span 8' between a engineered beam and a tripled 2 x 10 beam. the tank will be sitting 8" away from the wall which is a form wall.
Cheers
VR
That's not even close to pushing the boundaries for a new house. Your tank has a huge footprint for its volume.

mike31154
08-05-2015, 03:44 AM
The interweb tells me a standard bathtub holds about 60 gals. Ergo, your 180 gallon is comparable to 3 standard tubs stacked on top of each other. Slightly different footprint, yes, but something to consider as a reference.

WarDog
08-05-2015, 05:31 AM
Invite 10 of your buddies over for beer and wings, stand them all in the spot where the tank is going while bouncing up and down. Pretty simple.