Shelving?

Entold

AC Members
Jan 18, 2012
88
0
0
32
I went out and bought a makeshift stand from lowe's. Its a 5 shelf rack with industrialized steel, no crossbeams. It says it will hold 1000 pounds for each shelf and 5000 pounds total. On my bottom shelf, I put my 40B Tortoise tank, only the next shelf I put my 20L aquarium, on the third shelf, I put my 10G turtle tank and a 5g frog tank, and on the top shelf, I put a 10g hamster tank. Do you think the shelves will hold up? I think it will but Im nervous. This is it http://www.lowes.com/ProductDisplay...gId=10051&cmRelshp=req&rel=nofollow&cId=PDIO1
 
my crystal ball foresees no collapsing. it doesn't seem like you're anywhere near the max weight. anchor it to the wall and you can climb it to clean tanks
 
I prob have max 800-1000 pounds on it but I never trust what people put on boxes. Eventually I wanna move the hamsters and put 2 14g biocubes. Now thats gonna be fun xD
 
I didnt add extra wood but hopefully it'll hold out. I didnt think the particle board was that bad but now I think I should redo and add some extra wood.
 
I did slightly on the 10g/frog shelf but I dried it up right away. It didnt seep in, seems like the particle board has some type of coating over it.
 
I have a similar shelf (looks the same, purchased from Lowe's, except it 48" wide) and initially had the same hesitation to use it.

The individual shelves are compressed particle board, which is more water resistant, but as added precaution, I wrapped each board in several layers of heavy duty thick plastic sheeting. This has protected them from the standard spills and one occasion where the filter backed up and spilled a gallon or two of water (which pooled on the plastic).

So far I've got one level with 4 ten gallon tanks, and on another level I've got 3 ten gallon tanks, plus a number of smaller containers for shrimp, green water and baby fish. The stand is super stable -- with one caveat -- take care to distribute the weight of your tanks evenly on the shelves.

My advice is to not set it up the way I did initially. At first I had 2 ten gallon tanks per shelf -- long side forward. This caused the boards to bow slightly in the middle, so the tanks were not even. Now, I set the tanks so that they are short side forward (this is how I get 4 tens per shelf) and the weight is now distributed more or less evenly. It's easy to verify that the tanks are level, just check that the waterline is the same distance from the top at all the corners.

I initially started out slowly with loading this thing down with weight, I only had a few tanks, partially filled...I've since put most of my 10 gallon tanks on it, and they're all more or less filled with water. I no longer have any hesitation about using it, though if it helps you sleep better at night, there's no harm in using extra boards/lumber to fortify and protect.
 
The only thing im really concerned with is the 20L. As long as its not too much weight Im okay
 
a 20 gallon will be approx 200 pounds of water weight. the tank, substrate, decor, etc will only add 50 more pounds or so at most. your 20 is fine.

i used to use utility shelving that had particle board shelves for my 10 gallon tanks. never worried one bit about the weight being too much, and my shelves were not rated anywhere near as high for weight as yours. i doubled up the particle board (the shelves came with 6 boards total) and wrapped the particle board in dollar store shower curtains to ensure no water got on the particle board.

here, my old shelving setup:

DSC02138.JPG

DSC02138.JPG
 
AquariaCentral.com