Also, what kind of plywood should I use for the top of my stand? Lowes has either Oak, Birch, or Blondewood. I planned on getting 3/4" plywood for the top with foam since my tank has no rim.
I prefer MDO (medium density overlay) coated both sides because it is flat, stiffer than other plywood, and waterproof.Whatever is cheapest.
The Oak, Birch, or Blondewood is only a veneer and generally only on one side, doesn't effect anything other than look.
I prefer MDO (medium density overlay) coated both sides because it is flat, stiffer than other plywood, and waterproof.
The edges and interior of MDO are waterproof. In tests it's been submerged unpainted for over a year in saltwater and still looked new. Exterior and marine grade plywood are not as flat as MDO. It is stiffer and so sags less but is only slightly stronger than marine.Yes you could make do without the extra safety margin of stiffness and flatness and the smooth surface is covered with foam. But moisture easily builds up under the tank and the downgrades from MDO can swell and stress the tank.It's no stronger for what is needed under a glass tank. And the edges are still not waterproof, and that is the part that will get wet the easiest.
The normal plywood I buy is flat, I'd shop somewhere else if the stuff you get isn't. The MDO is smoother.... but so what, it makes zero difference especially with Styrofoam on it.
The edges and interior of MDO are waterproof. In tests it's been submerged unpainted for over a year in saltwater and still looked new. Exterior and marine grade plywood are not as flat as MDO. It is stiffer and so sags less but is only slightly stronger than marine.Yes you could make do without the extra safety margin of stiffness and flatness and the smooth surface is covered with foam. But moisture easily builds up under the tank and the downgrades from MDO can swell and stress the tank.
If it's that expensive where you are, then the paint is a good alternative, not the titanium, LOL. As a fish club member I've been in lots of fish rooms, and seen more problems with plywood swelling than with legs. And lots of failing bracing to tangent.Actually I think tungsten should just be used, solid block, and 60' pilings under it.....
I doubt he has a 4x8 tank, there will be exposed edges. I have some huge doubts that water could get under the styrofoam with the weight of a tank on it. Hell in my garage water didn't get under a small piece of foam that I had a few pounds of tools on even.
The glass does not need complete support either. It does not need to be perfectly smooth either, and at 3/4 thick it doesn't matter what kind of wood you use it will bend to however flat the rest of your stand is.
I'd be more worried about the legs swelling more than plywood under the tank.
A 3/4 MDO sheet of plywood is $84 here, and there is only 3 sheet in the city at HD. Single sided MDO is $68.
Normal 3/4 plywood, $27
It is a very unneeded expense. A can of paint for the whole stand would be cheaper and far more useful overall.
hi
i have added a double 2x6 on the top and double 2x4 on the bottom
tank is 2500x1000x600 and stand is 2800x1000x1000
is this ok? tank will rest on the main legs
Given the number of legs you have you don't need to double up either. As the tank sits directly over the legs, you have good load transfer. The other boards don't get the same support so aren't really helping.
The stand being wider isn't an issue as long as you have supports directly under the edges. The best way to do this would be to extend the "ends" of the stand so to support the extra width. If the long boards are moved inside of the ends, then all four sides of the tank can be supported properly.
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By extending the yellow boards, you can extend the stand either way. Just make sure the top frame is 2X8 for the size tank you mentioned.
HTH,
RocketEngineer
Grnrado, how long did this take to put together and what was your cost .. btw i love it.