Aquarium on second floor

nagreen

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i'm moving to a new apartment complex next summer and there's a chance i'll get a second or third floor apartment.. i have a jbj 45 which weighs 100lbs just the glass aquarium.. i'm looking at around 360lbs of water and everything else in the aquarium i'd guess, plus a 75lb stand as well.
I'm a 280lb guy too so i just want to know if i'll be fine with that much weight in the same area on the second floor?
Anyone with big tanks not on the bottom floor?
 

reefes pieces

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I have had a 120g on the second floor of my condo for 2 years and a 90g before that if that helps boost confidence. 45g is no problem. bringing up 5 gal jugs of water to the 2nd floor sucks though.
 

AdamNC

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You'll be fine. I have a 29 gallon on my loft with no issues and the owners before me had a 90 gallon in the same spot.
 

Willz

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i'm moving to a new apartment complex next summer and there's a chance i'll get a second or third floor apartment.. i have a jbj 45 which weighs 100lbs just the glass aquarium.. i'm looking at around 360lbs of water and everything else in the aquarium i'd guess, plus a 75lb stand as well.
I'm a 280lb guy too so i just want to know if i'll be fine with that much weight in the same area on the second floor?
Anyone with big tanks not on the bottom floor?

I don't think the weight is an issue. I would definitely get a renter's insurance policy with a rider that specifically references damages incurred from aquarium ownership. I did this when I had about 400g in tanks in my second floor apartment. It was worth it to me to know I was covered financially if one popped a seam and dropped a ton of water onto the downstairs neighbor. It wasn't that expensive either.
 

RMS18

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I own a condo on the second level, 40 gallon tank 15 gallon sump and homemade stand that weights over 100. I have hard wood floors, only thing I noticed is the floor boards warp a bit near the tank.
 

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