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#1 |
Moved On
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Miami,FL
Posts: 1,141
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i have a t4 pump on my tank for a closed loop system. recently when i touch my water i get a mild shock. i know it is from this pump b/c wheni un plugg it the shocking stops. i took the pump off and check the seals and they seem to be fine. is this a common problem with this pump? is there a way to fix this problem? is the electric charge in the water bad?
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#2 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Crestview FL
Posts: 284
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stray voltage eh? Perhaps it's time to open it up for some maintance and have a look around, only reason I think you would get a shock is if the water comes in contact with the wires somewhere. I'm guessing this is a external pump, is it leaking at all?
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#3 |
Moved On
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Miami,FL
Posts: 1,141
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it was alittle around the housing, so i took it off and cleanded it up, put it back to gether and worked fine for a while and then BAM got shocked again. is there another way to do a complete maintance on the pumps? i am fairly new to this stuff so i am fairly unfamiliar to external pumps.
thank you for reading, and helping me out. |
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#4 |
Premium Member
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Location: Tennessee
Posts: 1,244
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Not sure how to fix the pump but you should have a ground probe in the tank and a GFI socket.
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For a mandarin to keep, a refugium you must have young Padawan. |
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#5 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 3,703
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likely a pump/powerhead
this happened to me and many others with RIO's back in the day |
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#6 |
Premium Member
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Location: Huntington Beach, CA
Posts: 2,957
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Please buy a GFCI everyone!!!!!!!!!
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80g Aiptasia dominated reef tank.. with fish and now a bunch of berghia! Current Tank Info: 80g tank, re-starting a reef after a zoanthid nudibranch plauge, followed by months of steady and unstoppable STN/RTN, crashed; stayed FOWLR for a couple years, currently an aiptasia dominated reef tank with fishies and BERGHIA |
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#7 | |
Moved On
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Miami,FL
Posts: 1,141
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What is a grond probe? it this a temp fix or permanete fix?
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#8 |
Moved On
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Miami,FL
Posts: 1,141
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what is a gfci? i have my equip plugged in to power strip. i think it might have a gfci.
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#9 |
Premium Member
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Location: Huntington Beach, CA
Posts: 2,957
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Like pictured above, or wall sockets with the red and black buttons.
Almost all power strips just have a fuse in them, this is NOT a GFCI. "surge protector" does not protect you... Most importantly, you would not have been shocked if it was a GFCI strip.
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80g Aiptasia dominated reef tank.. with fish and now a bunch of berghia! Current Tank Info: 80g tank, re-starting a reef after a zoanthid nudibranch plauge, followed by months of steady and unstoppable STN/RTN, crashed; stayed FOWLR for a couple years, currently an aiptasia dominated reef tank with fishies and BERGHIA |
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#10 |
Moved On
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Miami,FL
Posts: 1,141
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thank you everyone for your time. i will go to the hardware store now and pick up some provisions.
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#11 |
Mouth Pipetting
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Charlottesville, VA
Posts: 6,278
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Stray volatage in the tank is not acceptable. You probably can't fix the pump and should replace it instead.
Everything in your tank should be plugged into a GFCI protected outlet. As I understand it, a GFCI will not prevent you from getting shocked, but it will prevent you from being electrocuted. A grounding probe will trip the GFCI before you do. So GFCI = essential, but a grounding probe is more a matter of personal preference and your specific tank situation.
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Josh |
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#12 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Illannoy
Posts: 1,365
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Agreed, time for a new pump. GFCIs are as important as anything on the tank. And should not be overlooked.
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Got Frags? Current Tank Info: 40 breeder. Kessil lights. Reef octopus skimmer. Vortec mp40 x2. |
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#13 |
Recovering Detritophobe
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Cary, NC
Posts: 7,443
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I have one outlet GFCI and one not. My return pump and heaters are on the regular outlet. You do not want a GFCI tripping while you are out of town and leaving your tank without power.
One time I nocked one of my fans into the frag tank. The combo of grounding probe and GFCI immediately shut of the power to the outlet which the fans were plugged into. A GFCI will not solve your problem however. Stray voltage can be solved by a grounding probe plugged into a GFCI. However, I still get shocked if my sump runs low on water and my return starts to run dry. Sounds like you need to contact the pump manufacturer and get that solved, or get a new pump.
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If it's worth doing, it's worth doing right. I remember when zoanthids were called things like "green" and "orange" and not "reverse gorilla nipple." Current Tank Info: 180g reef with all the bells and whistles |
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#14 |
Claris or Elliot?
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Nightopia
Posts: 2,750
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A grounding probe in unnecessary as any electrical submersed equipment is already acting a grounding probe. And besides that, without a path to ground, any stray voltage is harmless - and a grounding probe provides just that.
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A rolling stone gathers no moss... Current Tank Info: 90g mixed reef, corner overflow (Mag 9.5), 25g refugium (Mag 5), 15g refugium, Orbit 260w pc, Pan World 50PX-X (Closed loop), AquaC EV-120 (now skimmerless) |
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#15 |
Premium Member
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Location: Huntington Beach, CA
Posts: 2,957
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And a grounding probe will cause the GFCI to trip in a way that does not provide any real benefit to you or your tank. It creates a much greater potential of losing power to your tank while you are away.
My solution is a GFCI for almost every piece of equipment but the main pump and a couple very secure devices that can never come into contact with the water. Therefore if the GFCI were to trip for an unexplained reason (it can happen), my main pump will keep everything circulating until I notice. This of course puts faith into the main pump not failing and sending electricity into the tank, but definately lowers the hazard to an acceptable level IMO by protecting 90% of the submerged equipment and allowing a failsafe for the tank itself in the case of a accidental GFCI trip. In the end there is still some slight risk, but I sacrafice it for my tank....
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80g Aiptasia dominated reef tank.. with fish and now a bunch of berghia! Current Tank Info: 80g tank, re-starting a reef after a zoanthid nudibranch plauge, followed by months of steady and unstoppable STN/RTN, crashed; stayed FOWLR for a couple years, currently an aiptasia dominated reef tank with fishies and BERGHIA Last edited by HBtank; 06/26/2007 at 07:33 PM. |
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#16 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Massillon, OH
Posts: 297
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I had the same problem, but the culprit for me was a lighting fixture. I was stupid enough to place it directly on top of an open aquarium, and got a few zaps before I figured it out.
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If you are in the stock market, look to diversify your portfolio with global equities. Warren Buffett said so. Current Tank Info: 75 gallon FOWLR tank with 20 gal sump/fuge |
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#17 | |
Premium Member
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Location: New Jersey
Posts: 3,646
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#18 |
Moved On
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Miami,FL
Posts: 1,141
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the problem is, is that my house was built in the late 50'searly 60's and not all the outlets have a grounding wire so if i were to put on a GFCI plug it would be merely useless. so i might have to run a grounding probe from an outlet that does have a grounded wire.
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#19 |
Premium Member
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Location: Huntington Beach, CA
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From what I have read, GFCI does not require the grounding wire.
All it does is sense a difference in amps between the hot lead and neutral lead (caused by electricity escaping to the ground by virtue of your body) and immediately shuts off the outlet if detected. This is independant of the grounding wire and it is not required from all that i have gathered. The plug in versions (i.e. Shock Buster) will work fine from all I have read, and do not require wiring. Though a socket could be installed as well, I personally used the buster because I am no electrician and chicken. This is just from all that I have read and hopefully remembered well ![]()
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80g Aiptasia dominated reef tank.. with fish and now a bunch of berghia! Current Tank Info: 80g tank, re-starting a reef after a zoanthid nudibranch plauge, followed by months of steady and unstoppable STN/RTN, crashed; stayed FOWLR for a couple years, currently an aiptasia dominated reef tank with fishies and BERGHIA Last edited by HBtank; 06/26/2007 at 07:55 PM. |
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#20 | |
Claris or Elliot?
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Nightopia
Posts: 2,750
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Quote:
"RCDs operate by measuring the current balance between two conductors using a differential current transformer, and opening the device's contacts if there is a balance fault (i.e., a difference in current between the phase conductor and the neutral conductor). More generally (single phase, three phase, etc.) RCDs operate by detecting a nonzero sum of currents, i.e. the current in the "live" (phase, hot) conductor plus that in the "neutral" conductor must equal zero (within some small tolerance), otherwise there is a leakage of current to somewhere else (to earth/ground, or to another circuit, etc.). In the United States, the National Electrical Code, requires GFCI devices intended to protect people to interrupt the circuit if the leakage current exceeds a range of 4–6 mA of current (the exact trip setting can be chosen by the manufacturer of the device and is typically 5 mA) within 25 milliseconds. GFCI devices which protect equipment (not people) are allowed to trip as high as 30 mA of current." From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GFCI The problem though without a ground a leakage most likely won't be detected as there will only be stray voltage. Without a path to ground it won't affect current. I don't know how much work you want to do, but running a ground wire would be fairly easy if you don't have a finished basement.
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A rolling stone gathers no moss... Current Tank Info: 90g mixed reef, corner overflow (Mag 9.5), 25g refugium (Mag 5), 15g refugium, Orbit 260w pc, Pan World 50PX-X (Closed loop), AquaC EV-120 (now skimmerless) |
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#21 |
Moved On
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Miami,FL
Posts: 1,141
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i live in miami so no basement. my attic is about 2 foot tall in most places, and my support walls are basically solid concrete plus the wiring is old so wiring would be a problem. any other ideas??
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#22 |
Premium Member
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Location: Huntington Beach, CA
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The GFCI will still protect you no matter what is the biggest point IMO.
If you want your tank grounded is another issue... I personally choose not to and discussed it some in a previous post why I choose not to.
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80g Aiptasia dominated reef tank.. with fish and now a bunch of berghia! Current Tank Info: 80g tank, re-starting a reef after a zoanthid nudibranch plauge, followed by months of steady and unstoppable STN/RTN, crashed; stayed FOWLR for a couple years, currently an aiptasia dominated reef tank with fishies and BERGHIA |
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#23 |
Claris or Elliot?
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Nightopia
Posts: 2,750
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If you have any copper piping close you could attach a wire to it as they are usually grounded. I don't know how you would find the piping, though...
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A rolling stone gathers no moss... Current Tank Info: 90g mixed reef, corner overflow (Mag 9.5), 25g refugium (Mag 5), 15g refugium, Orbit 260w pc, Pan World 50PX-X (Closed loop), AquaC EV-120 (now skimmerless) |
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