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#1
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![]() I concur with what Chin said. It also prevents tiny pebbles or specs of anything hard from putting stress on a single point of the bottom of your tank.
Imagine the weight of your tank , and a tiny piece of gravel under it somewhere :S Better safe than sorry with like a 1/2" sheet of foam buffering it. Quote:
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Gary Tank was up for 7yrs and 10months. Thanks Everyone! 2016/2017 180Gallon Build Coming Soon... |
#2
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![]() I moved a 440 lb acrylic tank in two stages.
First, it came into the house using 6 people, and no suction cups. It was dicey ![]() The tank then sat for a month on our pool table until the stand was ready. The final move came with 4 people each using a suction cup. The tank felt about half the weight of the initial move, and was a breeze to lift onto the stand (at 45.5" tall). ![]() Yes, you'll have to remove the paper coating on the acrylic to get a solid grip. I borrowed some suction cups from a professional firm, so they had ample capacity for the required lift (pump-action suction, not a lever setting). When I practized with a suction cup to check it out, I found that my strength gave out while lifting at an end of the tank before there was any sign that the suction cup was even thinking about slipping. Definately required for the safety of all concerned ... Good luck with that monster tank ![]()
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______________ - Lyle Our tank http://www.pansy-paws.com/aquarium/ 29 gallon nano-tank |