djryan2000
New member
I'm considering putting a 75 gal with a 30 sump in my upstairs bedroom. The sump is usually half full according to the seller of the tank stand and sump. My house was built in 1991.
I've read on RC and other forums to put a tank like that upstairs to check how the floor is reinforced (concrete is preferable), to put the tank against a load-bearing wall, and perpendicular to joists.
For the joists, I checked the way I saw wooden beams going in my basement and assumed that's how they run. As for the load-bearing wall I was planning on putting the tank between two exterior walls - or as close to them as possible considering one of them is a cape. Assuming these two methodologies are correct, how can I tell if my floor is reinforced with concrete or is just wood?
Is there anything I can look out for indicating that damage is in the future if I keep the tank running? ie a precursor to the floor sagging and harming the house's value.
Is there any way I can increase the footprint of the stand?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I've read on RC and other forums to put a tank like that upstairs to check how the floor is reinforced (concrete is preferable), to put the tank against a load-bearing wall, and perpendicular to joists.
For the joists, I checked the way I saw wooden beams going in my basement and assumed that's how they run. As for the load-bearing wall I was planning on putting the tank between two exterior walls - or as close to them as possible considering one of them is a cape. Assuming these two methodologies are correct, how can I tell if my floor is reinforced with concrete or is just wood?
Is there anything I can look out for indicating that damage is in the future if I keep the tank running? ie a precursor to the floor sagging and harming the house's value.
Is there any way I can increase the footprint of the stand?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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