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#11
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Re: Electricity problem
i remember when i bpught my tank i got a glass heater and they made sure to tell me to be careful with it because if it got the smallest crack in it it would send a current through the system. so unplug your heater and do you little shock test with everything the way it was when you first got shocked minus the heater being on
Current Aquarium(s) Description: 120 gallon with built in dual overflows Experience in Saltwater & Reef Aquarium Hobby: >1 year Other Intrests: football, paintball, workin out, saltwater fish |
| LivingReefs.com - Reef Aquarium Forum |
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#12
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Re: Electricity problem
I don't have any heaters. Who needs heaters with lights like mine?
Here's what I do have: 6 Koralia #3 powerheads A digital thermometer (battery operated) My lights (1200 watts of MH and T5) Ehiem 1260 pump taking water from the sump to the skimmer Octopus stock pump that runs the skimmer MagDrive return pump AquaClear filter that I run ChemiPure in Fluorescent strip light over the fuge Grounding probe plugged into a 3-prong outlet 2 clip on fans for evaporative cooling I don't know the names of stuff, so please forgive my ignorance, I'll try to understand. All of these things are spread out between three different outlets, and are connected by extension cords and 3 powerstrips. Two of the powerstrips (the ones that my lights, powerheads and return pumps are one) are the heaviest duty powerstrips that Home Depot sells. The third powerstrip is a regular old one. I don't know if any of this is helpful at all, like I said, I have no idea about any of this.
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They see me moderatin', they hatin'. Sarah Current Aquarium(s) Description: 240-gallon reef with a 55-gallon sump and 35-gallon refugium Experience in Saltwater & Reef Aquarium Hobby: 7 years Last edited by Bifferwine; April 27th, 2008 at 05:41 PM. |
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#13
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Re: Electricity problem
i think you may have gotten water somewhere where water shouldnt be. like on a near by electrical cord or something. i dont really know. im just thinking out loud
Current Aquarium(s) Description: 120 gallon with built in dual overflows Experience in Saltwater & Reef Aquarium Hobby: >1 year Other Intrests: football, paintball, workin out, saltwater fish |
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#14
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Re: Electricity problem
Yeah, I've gotten shocked before from me splashing water onto one of the powerstrips accidentally. So has NoobDeBiff. But tonight I wasn't touching anything but my bare feet on the ground and one hand in the water.
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They see me moderatin', they hatin'. Sarah Current Aquarium(s) Description: 240-gallon reef with a 55-gallon sump and 35-gallon refugium Experience in Saltwater & Reef Aquarium Hobby: 7 years |
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#15
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Re: Electricity problem
i had a tank that did that when the heater got broke by a peice of rock. start unpluging one thing at a time until there is no current in the tank any more. by unpluging onething at a time you will be able to pinpoint what is causing it.
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"Knowledge is Power" James Daugherty
Current Aquarium(s) Description: 75 gal Experience in Saltwater & Reef Aquarium Hobby: 9 years Other Intrests: fishing,hunting,computers |
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#16
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Re: Electricity problem
I'll do this tomorrow. NoobDeBiff has the night off from his night job tomorrow, so he can help me when he gets home from his day job.
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They see me moderatin', they hatin'. Sarah Current Aquarium(s) Description: 240-gallon reef with a 55-gallon sump and 35-gallon refugium Experience in Saltwater & Reef Aquarium Hobby: 7 years |
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#17
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Re: Electricity problem
Hope everything goes ok till then =\ Good luck with everything.
Current Aquarium(s) Description: 150g, 24g,8g Experience in Saltwater & Reef Aquarium Hobby: About 1 Year Other Intrests: Computers, Robotics |
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#18
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Re: Electricity problem
Leave the probe in place. If you really want to find out were the current is coming from, then take the grounding device out and take one device out at a time until the amp meter shows no current is flowing. This would mean the last thing you took out of the tank or turned off was the culprit. By the law of averages I would bet on it being one of your power heads. The grounding device does complete the circuit in the most efficient way possible by grounding to your household running ground system that runs to each outlet. It does make the water safer or you and the fish but does not solve the leak it just directs it away from the tank. Electricity always uses the best ground available. A wire hooked directly to a grounded outlet cover screw is a much better ground than you are standing on a relativly insulated floor. I assume you are not standing in a puddle or holding a metal plumbing line when putting your hand in the tank since getting shocked. If you know any handy man types or mechanics just ask them to bring over a multimeter, they likely will have one.
Current Aquarium(s) Description: 120g SPS Mother Colony Tank, 40 g sump, back wall overflows, 2 closed loop circulation circuits 59X Experience in Saltwater & Reef Aquarium Hobby: 35 years in marine aquarium trade and managing LFS's, 10 years with coral. Other Intrests: Coral Propagation, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Cabinetry, and Reef Systems Development |
| The Following User Says Thank You to fatman For This Useful Post: | ||
Bifferwine (April 28th, 2008) | ||
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#19
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Re: Electricity problem
How old are the Koralia's? If they are the first release, that was a common problem...stray voltage. Hydor replaced for free all Koralia 2's & 3's that had that problem.
Current Aquarium(s) Description: 125 reef, mostly SPS Experience in Saltwater & Reef Aquarium Hobby: 20 years |
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#20
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Re: Electricity problem
I use heaters so that I do not have drops of temperature when the lights are out. I try to never have more than a two degree temperture swing. I usually manage to do this. I find my self quite shaken when I have an occasional 4 degree difference in twenty four hours. I could not imagine going without heaters in any of my tank systems. I definitely do not suggest anyone do so, regardlees of where they live or what there lighting or household heating may be. Good temperature controllers are expensive, but so is nearly everthing in reefing. Temperature swings cause a huge stress on fish and corals. Temperature swings around the ocean's reefs are usually very, very slow in happening and usually very small.
Current Aquarium(s) Description: 120g SPS Mother Colony Tank, 40 g sump, back wall overflows, 2 closed loop circulation circuits 59X Experience in Saltwater & Reef Aquarium Hobby: 35 years in marine aquarium trade and managing LFS's, 10 years with coral. Other Intrests: Coral Propagation, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Cabinetry, and Reef Systems Development Last edited by fatman; April 27th, 2008 at 03:36 PM. |
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