Anyway, I need to put a 500 gallon water tank ten feet high. I'm sure the
verticals will hold the 4000 lbs. as they were originally for five pallets
high. But I wonder about the loadbeams. Anyone know? Or, how would you
reinforce?
Karl
Good question. I have 2 275-lb water tanks on a pallet rack with 10-ft
beams. They are not yet filled, but I have no doubt they will take the
load. Am I wrong?
BTW, this is for a rainwater collection system for my waterless shop.
Work in progress.
275 lb?
i
Sorry, gallons. I was thinking poundage.
These are your basic liquid storage totes that are being surplussed all
over.
They should have a load rating stamped on them. Most of the ones I have
seen do.
You have 4,150 lbs. in the water alone. NOT something you want coming down.
I would probably drop the company a note or call them and see what they
say. http://www.speedrack.net/
--
Steve W.
Well those work out to about 4,600 pounds of water and another 180
pounds of tank weight if they are the common steel cage style.
--
Steve W.
No ratings on that site, but I found this:
http://www.cisco-eagle.com/storage/rack/Palletrack/upright_capacities.htm
If that is representative, and I'm reading this right, then 4000 lbs
should be well within the load rating for decent pallet racking
Typically manufacturers weight capacities are similar. We are a
distributor and I can only tell you that brand new wireway husky beams
are rated as follows per pair;
5"x120" is 4,412 lbs per pair.
If the face height is higher the weight cap. increases smaller it
decreases.
If you are in need of any more information or new items you can visit
us at http://www.edwardsstorage.com
I don't know the brand of mine, but the beams are 10-ft. They look
fairly new. I would think they are more like 6" high. They are stepped
on the inside.
So, with both 275-lb tanks full of water, plus a few more things on that
section, I could well be right at the load limit. hmm