Really helpful thread
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I stood my stand up on its end and only used one. Made it easier to roll around that way. But, I had the plywood on the sides so it made it easy. Otherwise my stand was too long to make some of the turns. Rolled in my 300 pound tank the same way. Made it very easy.Ahhhh, I see what you mean, now. Thanks!
Oh, $20 ain't bad! Think I'll need one for each corner, or will two suffice for the stand? I'll 100% be getting help from a few strong friends to move the actual tank- I don't trust myself to move it solo.
One placed right in the center is enough.Ahhhh, I see what you mean, now. Thanks!
Oh, $20 ain't bad! Think I'll need one for each corner, or will two suffice for the stand? I'll 100% be getting help from a few strong friends to move the actual tank- I don't trust myself to move it solo.
You want a 6' long, 30" wide stand for the extra space inside, so don't sacrifice that space with unnecessary posts & beams. Build it as if the tank was 6' long, 30" wide. The front beam made out of sistered 2x6s, 2x4 'joists' between front & back beams, 3/4" plywood top. 1 2x4 post at back corners, doubled at front corners just to give the sistered beam a place to land. Basically a longer, wider version of mine:
I'd make sure the ends of the tank land on joists - so place them accordingly. Plywood on sides and back makes it plenty strong - even making the 2x4 posts almost redundant.
Sorry it's taken me so long to respond. I don't think I'm fully understanding you yet. Please forgive the atrocious design here (I'm still learning to use this 3d modeling crap, and I'm short on time). I think I've roughly mocked up what you're describing: sistered 2x6s across the front on the top frame, sitting on 2x4 posts. I will have joists underneath the sides of the tank, and the back edge of the tank will be supported by the back edge of the frame. What worries me is what's circled in red. Yes, it'll be sitting on plywood, but there's nothing under the plywood to support the otherwise floating front edge of the tank. Does plywood really do that good a job at weight distribution that I could get away with that? The weight will transfer to those sistered front 2x6s? Am I worrying too much? I know there'll be front-to-back joists under the sides of the tank, but all I can imagine is the plywood bowing and then snapping under the weight of a 4' long unsupported front tank edge. It's totally possible that I simply don't understand the physics of weight distribution, though (I got a D in physics in college...).The 3/4" plywood is supported by the 2x4 joists. Just for extra warm fuzzies you could have one under each 'end' of the tank and then another two in between those (at 16" and 32" relative to tank). Plenty strong. Use the joist hangers, they're cheap insurance.
Nope, you are correct. You want the sistered joist under the edge of the tank. A single joist would work fine on the outside edge.Sorry it's taken me so long to respond. I don't think I'm fully understanding you yet. Please forgive the atrocious design here (I'm still learning to use this 3d modeling crap, and I'm short on time). I think I've roughly mocked up what you're describing: sistered 2x6s across the front on the top frame, sitting on 2x4 posts. I will have joists underneath the sides of the tank, and the back edge of the tank will be supported by the back edge of the frame. What worries me is what's circled in red. Yes, it'll be sitting on plywood, but there's nothing under the plywood to support the otherwise floating front edge of the tank. Does plywood really do that good a job at weight distribution that I could get away with that? The weight will transfer to those sistered front 2x6s? Am I worrying too much? I know there'll be front-to-back joists under the sides of the tank, but all I can imagine is the plywood bowing and then snapping under the weight of a 4' long unsupported front tank edge. It's totally possible that I simply don't understand the physics of weight distribution, though (I got a D in physics in college...).
You're a LOT better at SketchUp than I am! How in god's green earth did you do that?! Is there a preprogrammed form for lumber, because I've been trying to draw out my dimensional lumber using the rectangle feature, and it's a pain and a half, and then I can't get them to line up nicely in the right planes. @Brew12 his diagram is infinitely more accurate than mine is- does your opinion change based on his correct dimensions?This is why SketchUp is so wonderful. Drawing it out accurately really helps get a 'feel' for weak points.
A 30" wide top surface, and a 24" wide tank. The sistered front beam is 3" thick. The distance from the inside edge of the beam to the front edge of the tank is then 3". Not that huge span your diagram shows. Now, consider as well my other suggestion, that you have joists running from front to back under where each end of the tank will rest, and two more at 16" and 32" from either end. That's 4 cross braces running perpendicular under the tank. The plywood is never spanning more than 16" unsupported. The tank itself is not made of rubber, it won't sag down between those 16" spans that are also supported by the beam just 3" away.
I've done a quick hack up of my own drawing to show:
It does not change my thoughts. I would still want my main supports under the tank rims, especially if it isn't rimless.You're a LOT better at SketchUp than I am! How in god's green earth did you do that?! Is there a preprogrammed form for lumber, because I've been trying to draw out my dimensional lumber using the rectangle feature, and it's a pain and a half, and then I can't get them to line up nicely in the right planes. @Brew12 his diagram is infinitely more accurate than mine is- does your opinion change based on his correct dimensions?
I know a 30" deep stand might cause a headache or two with maintenance, but I'd planned to use a step ladder anyway. And a 6" ledge out front is enough for me to stand or brace a foot on as I kneel on the 1' sections on the sides, or to put things down on (like a food container, or a net, or dosing cup or something). Really, I just wanted to maximize space underneath, and perhaps if I get rich and can someday upgrade, I'll have a ready-made stand for a tank with a 6' x 30" footprint!
I really appreciate everyone's input on this! Thanks for helping me get this right.
Yup. I don't doubt it would work. The 2x4 joists will transfer the weight to the edge beams. It just isn't how "I" would do it. This is a much easier build than I would make so that is a plus.Getting better at SketchUp is just a matter of doing the hours and watching lots of tutorials. I’m still very rudimentary with it and always think I must be doing things the hard way.
In the end we’re not structural engineers who can actually model this stuff - it’s a matter of “feel” and experience. @Brew12 and I “feel” a little different on this one but we’re actually pretty close. Lots of ways you can tackle this design in the end.
I would not use any kind of "hanger" product for those joists. In the environment they will be put in I promise you they will corrode, and likely very quickly. It may not ever end up contaminating your tank but its a chance I wouldn't want to take. Use a quality screw on the ends and you won't have a problem. If you're still uncomfortable with it you can get a "Timberscrew" for those joists just make sure you predrill.