cr500_af;655491 wrote: That will be true for 50% of the exterior walls.![]()
Touche'
cr500_af;655491 wrote: That will be true for 50% of the exterior walls.![]()
sts04c;655365 wrote: I would assume that the joists run perpendicular to the perimeter wall. Anyone???? If that is the case, is this feasable?
Jaycen B.;655528 wrote: Pull the carpet up and see what u got.
grouper therapy;655534 wrote: What type of floor are you placing it on? Carpet? tile?
Edit: I personally would not hesitate to set that tank on that floor system as long as it did not violate property rules. What kind of stand is it ?
Edit: Most engineered floor systems have a safety factor of 3 so it would probably actually hold 360 psf.
Edit: Even if the joist run parallel the load is distributed to the outside band/wall, the joist under the tank and at least the next joist for a total of three. If the joist are running perpendicular then it is only three joist in the 48" of tank
grouper therapy;655551 wrote: I can tell you that a an adult in a garden tub probably blows that equation apart especially if you consider how much of the tub actually contacts the floor system.
most of the timeRbredding;655565 wrote: yes, but tubs are planned for...
an aquarium isn't..
(never seen a tub on an upper floor that didn't have double joists under it.)