Hola!
The time has come to sell Mike's tank, stand, and canopy. Well, more accurately, next weekend is the time to sell it. Right now, it's keeping water from flooding our fireplace room, while simultaneously housing fish and corals, and in its spare time it sits there lookin' pretty. Next Friday it will be emptied and by Saturday it should be ready to haul out of the house.
OK, on to business:
It's a Marineland 300 gallon deep dimension reef ready glass tank with a starfire front-pane, on a custom made stand with a matching canopy. NOTE: the stand was built in place because the floor slopes significantly front to back where it sits, and we didn't want to just shim it for a tank that was going to weigh as much as an entire sumo wrestling team. Once the tank is emptied and removed from the stand, we would be happy to trim up the back legs so that it will sit level on a non-sloping surface. If you haven't seen it, the stand is skinned and framed out with cedar fence posts that have been sealed with clear poly. There's a door on the end, and the back is open, to allow access to the space under the tank. Canopy made to match, with two doors that lift up in the front to allow access for feeding, etc.
For pics and details, here's the build thread:
http://www.marinecolorado.org/forum...t-2-of-losing-my-mind-Bajamike-s-300-DD-build
$1200 firm.
We have suction handles to help with loading. You should bring lots of friends (it took 7 burly men to get it in place) and a large vehicle capable of hauling... umm.. heavy things.
The time has come to sell Mike's tank, stand, and canopy. Well, more accurately, next weekend is the time to sell it. Right now, it's keeping water from flooding our fireplace room, while simultaneously housing fish and corals, and in its spare time it sits there lookin' pretty. Next Friday it will be emptied and by Saturday it should be ready to haul out of the house.
OK, on to business:
It's a Marineland 300 gallon deep dimension reef ready glass tank with a starfire front-pane, on a custom made stand with a matching canopy. NOTE: the stand was built in place because the floor slopes significantly front to back where it sits, and we didn't want to just shim it for a tank that was going to weigh as much as an entire sumo wrestling team. Once the tank is emptied and removed from the stand, we would be happy to trim up the back legs so that it will sit level on a non-sloping surface. If you haven't seen it, the stand is skinned and framed out with cedar fence posts that have been sealed with clear poly. There's a door on the end, and the back is open, to allow access to the space under the tank. Canopy made to match, with two doors that lift up in the front to allow access for feeding, etc.
For pics and details, here's the build thread:
http://www.marinecolorado.org/forum...t-2-of-losing-my-mind-Bajamike-s-300-DD-build
$1200 firm.
We have suction handles to help with loading. You should bring lots of friends (it took 7 burly men to get it in place) and a large vehicle capable of hauling... umm.. heavy things.