I am pretty sure it was our fault. If you looked at the silicone it actually was still perfect, elastic, no curling etc.
I thought we'd drag it a couple of feet across the tile floor. My husband thought it would go faster if he picked up one side off the ground and I pushed on the other side. We had drained the water but left the sand in so there was quite a bit of weight on the bottom.
When he picked it up and I moved it forward I heard a rip sound but couldn't see anything so figuring it must have just pulled a little on the wood stand.
In retrospect the torque on the tank half suspended, being moved with the weight inside of it shifting must have weakened the structural seam in that corner.
Just one of those things where a small mistake leads to major repercussions. It's not one of the most forgiving hobbies.
Had we taken the time to:
a) empty the sand
b) push it across rather than lift on one side and shove on the other
it probably would have turned out just fine. As usual hurrying things really gets you in this hobby.
That being said somebody running the faucet at full blast in the next room now really makes my heart beat faster. I don't think I'll ever look at tanks the same way again. Kind of scared of the 215 coming. lol. Yay for nanos!
We got extra boards and will yank up the floor and replace the damaged ones in a few weeks when the new tank is done. The main thing now will be for all of the fish to survive.
Super crammed to have them all in a 10g. Saltwater is ready and they will either move into that temp 75g tonight or the new 30g QT...




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