goldygrrl said:
If you have a larger car or SUV, I wouldn't bother stressing the fish out by taking him out of his original tank at all. Setting the tank on your wife's lap is not a great idea in case of car accident as mentioned in earlier post, not to mention that your wife will get soaked with fish water if you hit a bump in the road and the water splashes over the side. However, if you can fit the tank behind one of the seats in the back or on the floor in the front of the car, or in the back of an SUV, I would do that.
Just a friendly tip on this suggestion, YMMV...I was once in a 1/2-ton truck and got rearended by a subcompact car. The other guy was max-effort braking, and final impact was only at about 10mph. I saw him in the rearview mirror just as he almost disappeared behind the tailgate, then WHAM. Any of the light items leaning against my back seat (it was an extracab 4WD truck) FLEW
forward and hit the driver's seatback hard enough to feel like I got punched. That was a soft attache case weighing only abou 4 lbs. that caused that. My dog was in the right seat (a 70-lb. greyhound-yellow lab mix) and I remember, by reflex, putting out my arm to restrain her and badly wrenching my shoulder.
A half-full 10-gallon tank becomes a 40-lb. glass missile in any sort of sudden-deceleration scenario. When it endures a secondary collision inside the cab, even in a light accident, it will explode into a multiplicity of fragments and you will be injured. My brother has investigated all sorts of accidents, and it's amazing how dangerous even small items can be when they are unrestrained, and worse when there is a collision. That's why I tell buddies who stow a jack on the floor behind the rearmost seat in the passenger compartment to put it in its proper design location where it can be restrained, or tie that stuff down in the truck bed. It's amazing how this stuff will fly to the interior roof and forward, especially if your are braking prior to impact.
Just based on my own sorry driving experiences where I was hit by an unattentive driver, I'm with the people who are into bagging the fish and at least putting the tank in a cardboard box in the trunk. That is a much safer idea. If you have to aerate, cob up a rigid container made out of non-shatterable media and, if possible, restrain it. Something made out of opaque polyethylene would give the fish some security, too.
v/r, N-A