moondoggy4
Team RC
Mikev15101 Heck of a first post Welcome to Reef Central
Acrylic need extra bracing because the bottom is more flexible then glass. IIRC I have read that supporting it every 2 feet works. I would do the top frame from 2x8, but 2x6s might work. Have 2 (or 3) cross braces and make sure they are well connected to the front and rear beams. Then put a piece of 3/4 (1/2 maybe) on top to support the tank.
You don't need the extra cross bracing on the bottom frame. Add the four corners, and from the way I read the first this shoud allow for less than 1/8 of flex with no vertical center brace.
Sorry I can't be better with the wood sizes. Hope this is helps.
Sigh... I'm confused.
The advice given here (consistently, after reading all the way through this thread!) is that a glass aquarium with a black rim should NOT have anything between itself and the stand. All well and good until I go and read http://glasscages.com/?sAction=AqWarranty where it says "A sheet of 3/4" Styrofoam (reaching completely side-to-side and front-to-back) must be placed between the tank and the surface of the stand."
S o who's right ? I assume the tank manufacturer knows what they're talking about, but presumably many people are doing just fine without the styrofoam...
This is interesting to me because I'm planning on getting one of their 240g (96 x 24 x 25) tanks around Xmas time...
Cheers,
Simon
It is ok to put Styrofoam on a tank if the glass panel on the bottom (very bottom panel that all your rock work and sand sits on top of) is touching the stand. That is how some manufacturers make their tanks.
You dont want to put styrofoam under a tank when that bottom piece of glass is not touching the stand. This happens two different ways. 1.) The manufacturer builds the tank with that bottom piece of glass inside the tank, above the bottom of the vertical panes of glass. 2.) when the manufacturer builds a tank and puts trim along the bottom of the tank.
The reason you dont want the styrofoam on these two conditions is because the styrofoam will actually push the vertical panes of glass (or trim which is still connected to the vertical pieces of glass) out away from the aquarium structure, possibly causing the panes of glass to come apart.
With all that said, I have never owned a glass cages tank nor do I know how they build them.
Hope this helps.
Rich
ok...building a stand for a 66L x 36W x 24H. ~ 250gallons.
Are 2x8's plenty? or 2x10's better? Also can the legs simply go straight to the floor and not build a bottom frame? Stand is being built in basement on a concrete floor. Also would seem easier to level w/ the legs directly hitting the floor opposed to a bottom box frame.
Also how many middle supports/cross braces do I need on the top frame....
Thanks
2x8 will be more than enough. Here's my reasoning.
According to the first post in this thread by RocketEngineer, for a tank with normal rectangular dimensions, a 2x6 is sufficient for tanks with a long dimension of 48" to 72". In another thread he said that the "strength" of the horizontal piece (resistance to deflection (bowing)) increases with the cube of the width of the horizontal piece. That means that if beam A is 2 times the width of beam B, then beam A is eight times as strong as beam B (2 cubed is 2*2*2 = 8).
A 2x6 is 5.5" wide, and a 2x8 is 7.25" wide. In other words, a 2x8 is 1.3182 times the width of a 2x6. Since 1.3182 cubed = 2.29, we know that a 2x8 is 2.29 times stronger than a 2x6, and since a 2x6 would be fine for your tank if your tank were 18" wide instead of 36" wide, we know that a 2x8 can handle your tank.
Another way to say it would be: since 2x6's would be fine if your tank were half as heavy as it is, and since 2x8's are more than twice as strong as 2x6's, you know that 2x8's would be fine for your tank.
I'm assuming that your tank only needs support on the edges. If that's not true, then just think of your tank as being two tanks, where each one is 66x18x24, Imagine a stand for each of these two tanks, and set these two stands next to each other to support your tank. That would amount to a single stand 66x36, made with horizontal 2x6's around the four edges, plus two side by side 66" long 2x6's supporting the center. I would replace these two with a single 66" long 2x8 (since we know it is twice as strong as a 2x6).
If you skin it with at least 1/4" plywood (I would use 3/8") then you can avoid using the 2x4's along the base. You need to make sure that no matter how hard you kick the bottom of the leg, that it will stay at 90 degrees relative to the top horizontal pieces. If you don't want to skin the whole thing, you MUST at least screw in a plywood triangle (about 18x18x25.5) at each of the 90 degree angles made by each of the four corner legs (8 triangles in all). If you don't, you risk the legs folding.
I agree with C-Rad that a 2x6 is strong enough from the first post.
I disagree in general with not needing a bottom frame. On a concrete floor probably not, but for the average floor part of the purpose of this frame is to distribute the weight of the tank. Just for those coming on in the middle of this thread.
Not a concrete expert, but I would think concrete would not require the spreading of the load.