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#11
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My answer: a) If you have a ground probe and no GFCI you are dead. b) You have no ground probe and no GFCI, you get one hell of a shock and may or may not be okay. c) You have a GFCI receptacle or breaker and it trips and everyone lives another day, and you go onto Canreef looking for help to fix your light. I pick C for me, tell your next of kin to let me know how A or B goes for you. |
#13
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![]() what about one GFCI on the wall outlet, one extension cord GFCI plugged into the wall outlet GFCI and one grounding probe plugged into the other socket of the wall GFCI? and everything else on the extension cord GFcI
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#14
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plug your equipment into a GFCI. Can plug in a regular powerbar into a GFCI and everything into it would be protected. If splitting load, use multiply GFCI, just not interconnected. Ground probe doesn't need to go into the GFCI ground, any ground would do.
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my tank |
#15
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![]() do be super safe! what if one GFCI fails?
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#16
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![]() only problem is you can't use a grounding probe and a GFI togeather or your equipment will be always tripping. unless you have absolutly no voltage leak which.
A GFI is enough to protect you, other wise code would require us to have grounding probes in our sinks as well as close outlets haveing GFI breakers. Steve
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#18
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![]() I'll play devils advocate. It is not at all unusual for me to be gone from the house for 16 or even 18 hours at a time. If I have some stray voltage trip the breaker at 8:00 I will come home at midnight and find everything dead from cold and lack of circulation.
A few weeks ago I gave myself a jolt when one of my Sedra pumps was putting some voltage into the tank and was actually happy that I don't run a GFCI as I really do not know how long the power would have been out. A grounding probe would be a good idea for me and I am now on the hunt for one, but I will take my chances with the rest. I'm not saying it is the smart way of doing things, only that the thought of killing everything in my tank (again) for tripping a breaker does not appeal to me. I was out of the hobby for years after everything in my tank died due to a breaker tripping and don't care for a repeat.
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"Government is the great fiction, through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else." -- Frederick Bastiat |
#19
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![]() these grounding probe/GFCI discussions always end up the same way.. lots of information either way. Use them or don't use them it is up to you.. you may or may not die, who knows.
There is A LOT of experience in this hobby on this forum, can anyone say that they have been or know someone who has been seriously/critically injured? Just curious.. Anyway, not that it really matters but my take on it is this.. There must be a very very good reason why code requires us to have GFCI in areas of our homes where water and electricity can be present (ie, bathrooms, etc). To me a fish tank is no different. A body of water with a tonne of electrical components. |
#20
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my tank |