Very good read!
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A few months late , but the joists are not sitting on the wall, they are screwed to it with brackets. I'm not an engineer, but I wouldn't trust a stand built that way, so IMO I would put extra support under the floor. You can be creative and stain some 4x4's to blend with your basement decorI know this is a very old thread and an Awesome write up!
Now after all that I have a question for my future build. I would like to replace the banister at their pong the stairs with a tank. It will be perpendicular to the joists and be about 100g+ sump and 6' long. Tank will be 15mm rimless and prob weigh 300lbs + Weight of a steel stand.
Joists are 16" centre. I'm not 100% but I believe they were 8"
Now is the floor where it meets the stairs considered a load bearing wall or Judt a floating. Wall?
Here is an old pic back before the basement Was finished (if I only knew I was going to do a tank)
Do you guys think there would be any issues taking off the banister and putting a tank here?
Underneath with crews is much stronger support than just a thick sheet of wood on top of your joints which it actually adds more wait to joints beneath it.Underneath the span? Could that work for doing it on top of the span? Or simply have a thick sheet of wood under the stand?
Ha- great thread and perfect timing.
Thinking about setting up a custom 180 ( 4 ' long x 2.5' x 2.5") on the main floor of a Brick house , with block outside basement walls and a block wall running down the middle of the basement, that was built early 1960's. the Main floor is hardwood ( red oak) , joists are 2 x 8 on 16 inch centers and run 12 feet from outside wall to the middle block wall in the basement. The sumps/refugium/etc. will all be in the basement - so no added weight for those.
Anybody with any thoughts on the current floor being good to go or not? I read the thread- but it seems each situation is different. The tank will be next to the outside wall - but since it is a custom tank it will be nearly 36 inches out from the outside wall after installing a overflow system on the back of it.