Hi, I'm new here so correct me in if I'm in the wrong area to post this:
I have been fish keeping for about a year now with my 10 gallon tank and I have decided I want to expand and add a larger 50 gallon. The tank is a 50 gallon lowboy aquarium to house neolamprologus multifasciatus. The dimensions are 48in wide, 24in deep and 10in tall. I believe I've worked it out to estimate that the tank should weigh around 650ish pounds.
I am interested in buying a garage shelving unit to hold this tank on with a safety factor of 3, meaning each shelf can hold 2000lbs. The problem I run into though is that most the shelving I find is either the exact size of my tank (meaning it may not fit) or 72in wide. The catch is that the 2000lb per shelf capacity only works when the weight is evenly distributed across the entire shelf, and my tank will only be 48 inches.
I was wondering:
1. How would I evenly distribute this weight across the entire width?
2. Is my estimate for the weight of the tank accurate?
3. is a factor of safety of 3 enough?
I have been fish keeping for about a year now with my 10 gallon tank and I have decided I want to expand and add a larger 50 gallon. The tank is a 50 gallon lowboy aquarium to house neolamprologus multifasciatus. The dimensions are 48in wide, 24in deep and 10in tall. I believe I've worked it out to estimate that the tank should weigh around 650ish pounds.
I am interested in buying a garage shelving unit to hold this tank on with a safety factor of 3, meaning each shelf can hold 2000lbs. The problem I run into though is that most the shelving I find is either the exact size of my tank (meaning it may not fit) or 72in wide. The catch is that the 2000lb per shelf capacity only works when the weight is evenly distributed across the entire shelf, and my tank will only be 48 inches.
I was wondering:
1. How would I evenly distribute this weight across the entire width?
2. Is my estimate for the weight of the tank accurate?
3. is a factor of safety of 3 enough?