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#1
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![]() I bought a couple small dollies from Costco (25 $ each) and then just lifted my BC 29 onto it and rolled it to another spot when I did hardwood this summer....was no big deal what-so-ever.
BTW my wife slide the linked dollies under whil I did the lifting.
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Biocube 29 est 05/05/08, Koralia 1, 30lbs live rock, ,yellow tail blue damsel, pair cinnamon clowns, baby snowflake eel,Toadstool , metallic green mushroom, assorted zoos , kenya treen 180gall display, 190 pds live rock, virgate rabbitfish,bluejaw trigger, bubblletip anemone,yellow tang, sailfin tang,melanarus wrasse, cloud wrasse, ![]() |
#2
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![]() You can buy furniture moving pads that are either rubber or fabric one side, hard smooth plastic on the other. I drained my 34g Solana about halfway, tipped one end up and slid the cups under two legs then tipped other end up and did the same. Sliding the tank is easy with 2 people. Slow and steady movements. If your tank doesn't have legs maybe get flat pads and not cups. Worked great for me in fact the tank is running on the pads right now lol.
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#3
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![]() Ian - can you please send me a picture or a link to the dollies you used? did you empty it first? how much did you have to lift it? did you move it tilted?
Brett - where did you buy these pads and what are they called? my tank has 4 legs...we will be two people as well so moving it should be easy
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My 29g Biocube: http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=62808 |
#5
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![]() The simplest way would be to empty all the water, move the tank to where you need to and then fill er back up with the same water which should still be the same temp.
then just repeat when you're read to move it back... Not a bad time to have some fresh SW ready for a change as well. |
#6
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![]() Thanks Brett, i will check Rona...
Dumping all the water is not an option as I have both fish and corals in there and there is no need to stress them more than the absolute minimum required in order to move it....
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My 29g Biocube: http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=62808 Last edited by edikpok; 09-15-2010 at 03:16 PM. |
#7
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![]() Whatever you end up doing, take pictures, i would love to see how it pans out!
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"120 Gallon - Fastest Build in the West" 20Gal Sump, 2x 250 PFO Metal Hallides running 2 20k XM Bulbs, 2X54 HOT5 1 KZ Coral Light 1 Fiji Purple, Euroreef RS 100 Skimmer, Quiet One 6000 Return Pump, 2X Tunze 6025, Nano Wavebox ~To Live Is To Reef~
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#8
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![]() I have moved more tanks than I can count, but there is nothing wrong with being overly cautious in this hobby.
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#9
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![]() Pheeww... so the aquarium has been finally moved and this is how it was done:
First of all I bought from HD some of those furniture moving plastics that come with some fluffy material that you can put on them to not scratch the floors. We laminated all the way to the aquarium. Then we needed 3 people. We put a piece of laminate under both sides of the aquarium and pry bars underneath them (the laminate to not damage the stand and to distribute the force applied by bar). Both people pushed the pry bars slightly to lift the aquarium just enough to move it onto the ready laminate to put the plastic fooot under it. Then we did the same to the pther side. And finally to the back legs. When all four legs had thplastic things underneath them, the aquarium was sliding like a charm. Then finished the laminates and moved it back, tilted ever so slightly to get rid of plastics. Overall, took about an hour to move and. No water was drained... Thanks for the suggestion!
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My 29g Biocube: http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=62808 |
#10
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![]() Glad to hear it went well!
The biocube has less seams to worry about does it not? I thought the front an sides are one curved piece but I may be wrong. Either way I'll bet you're relieved it's done. |