BeanAnimal
Premium Member
brian, you have no idea what I have a background or education in, please keep the insults to yourself. You are talking to me as an "expert", yet seem to want to get "experts" opinons?
For the record, I am fully aware of the difference between a dead load and live load. I am fully capable of reading joist tables, span tables and other engineering data. If you wish to talk about laods in general then we can discuss all of the fine details and use engineering and structural analysis to design the floor or supports to hold the load with the desired amount of deflection or safety factor. If you really understood joist and span tables, you would also know that in the real world they are only a starting point, and can be somewhat useless or misleading in many situations. You may also want to note that many of the "building codes" that you will look at have nothing to do with real world safety, instead they are passed by people who "think" they are doing something useful, by poloticians to generate "Permiting" revenue, or politicians to force "certification" and prevent competition for established contracting firms (pork at it's worst). I can show you pages of such codes here in pittsburgh, and any other city, township, or municipality.... take good look at the new BOCA codes one time and tell me how many of them are relavant?
This brings us to the question at hand, and the "general answer" that seems to keep getting lost in all of the back and forth.
The fact is that most modest sized tanks will be just fine in most situations. If your 90 gallon tank breaks the drywall in your basement, causes floor joists to crack or dishes to slide off the table, then you have other problems and have likely already severely overlaoded your floor structure, or you live in a shack with 2x4 joists 24" on center. I am sorry but this simply isn't worth the trouble your making it out to be. A 300 gallon tank? Well that may be something to really look into, but then again, I don't see it falling through a floor either, as it's footprint is rather large.
For the record, I am fully aware of the difference between a dead load and live load. I am fully capable of reading joist tables, span tables and other engineering data. If you wish to talk about laods in general then we can discuss all of the fine details and use engineering and structural analysis to design the floor or supports to hold the load with the desired amount of deflection or safety factor. If you really understood joist and span tables, you would also know that in the real world they are only a starting point, and can be somewhat useless or misleading in many situations. You may also want to note that many of the "building codes" that you will look at have nothing to do with real world safety, instead they are passed by people who "think" they are doing something useful, by poloticians to generate "Permiting" revenue, or politicians to force "certification" and prevent competition for established contracting firms (pork at it's worst). I can show you pages of such codes here in pittsburgh, and any other city, township, or municipality.... take good look at the new BOCA codes one time and tell me how many of them are relavant?
This brings us to the question at hand, and the "general answer" that seems to keep getting lost in all of the back and forth.
The fact is that most modest sized tanks will be just fine in most situations. If your 90 gallon tank breaks the drywall in your basement, causes floor joists to crack or dishes to slide off the table, then you have other problems and have likely already severely overlaoded your floor structure, or you live in a shack with 2x4 joists 24" on center. I am sorry but this simply isn't worth the trouble your making it out to be. A 300 gallon tank? Well that may be something to really look into, but then again, I don't see it falling through a floor either, as it's footprint is rather large.