My 450 is about the max I can keep while maintaining a semblance of domestic tranquility
Big tanks definitely come with their own set of concerns. There was no way our big tank could go in our old house. We tore down the garage and built the fishroom by pouring a new slab over the old garage slab. An engineer drew up the plans. The area under the tank has extra rebar.For me, the limiting factors are:
4. Structural integrity of the house. I don't know how big of a tank could be placed on the poured slab in my basement, and don't want to find out the hard way. Ask an engineer, you say? Sure, go ahead; between covering their own asses, not knowing the details of my home's construction and simply disagreeing on the sum of 2 + 2, you will never get the same answer from any of them.
If I had thought of this before I built my home I would probably have something similar to your in-wall setup. I only caught the fish keeping bug again in 2017 when my kids wanted and got a 55gal setup with glowing gravel substrate.Big tanks definitely come with their own set of concerns. There was no way our big tank could go in our old house. We tore down the garage and built the fishroom by pouring a new slab over the old garage slab. An engineer drew up the plans. The area under the tank has extra rebar.
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