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#11
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![]() Good grief Charlie Brown .. don't be testing for stray current with your finger. No multimeter in the house?? No GFCI?? If I had nothing to work with I would unplug everything and check each item over one by one, usually you can see a little crack or something if it has let go.
As you surmised it's probably not your lights unless there is a conductive path from the lights to the water. It's one of your pumps or your heater, gotta be.
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#12
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![]() ![]() Last edited by Myka; 10-21-2010 at 03:45 AM. |
#13
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Who ever has died after getting electrocuted from there fish tank please post now: |
#14
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![]() Since we are talking about testing equipment try this test on for giggles....Need to know if the stove is grounded correct
Step one ..... use a metal pot to make some pudding ( flavor optional) Step two....... stir said pudding with a full metal spoon... like a teaspoon Step three...... reach over to the kitchen sink (stainless steel) WHILE at the same time stirring the pudding in the metal pot with your metal spoon and see what happens.. Happened to a girl friend many years ago and try to figure out what happened after you hear the scream and run into the kitchen to find her laid out on her back with pudding dripping from the ceiling. Last edited by jorjef; 10-21-2010 at 04:37 AM. |
#15
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![]() I would say the heater is a likely culprit as it will only shock you when the heater comes on. So test it by turning up the thermostat and making sure it on then unplug it and see if the shock goes away.
I had a faulty heater that did in a bunch of stuff in my tank and also found a faulty heater in the LED tank at Oceanic that killed a couple of clams. |
#16
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But I didn't even think about using my multimeter. But I need help, whats the best way to test water? more or less what is a decent ground to use. |
#17
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Do you smell that? Just waaalk away...... sloooowly |
#18
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![]() Don't dismiss the lights, particularly flourescents, as the cause for your tickles. Fluorescents in particular can induce a fair amount of voltage into your water via the electromagnetic fields produced by them. If you have clip on individual reflectors such as on a T5HO retro set up, make sure you ground them as well. I used to get a good tingle when brushing up against them with my hand in the water. Grounding the reflectors helped mitigate this, but there will still be some voltage induced into the water by the EMF produced by the light tube.
Here's a link with a little more in depth info. Talks about GFCIs as well and has some thoughts regarding grounding probes. http://angel-strike.com/aquarium/GFI...alDetails.html
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Mike 77g sumpless SW DIY 10 watt multi-chip LED build ![]() |