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Unread 10/24/2011, 05:09 AM   #1
reefinquisitive
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electrical question

im thinking about setting up a 180g tank will i need to run a dedicated breaker for this tank or not.....will have a fuge skimmer ato apex controller
3 mp40s and was thinking about going with the ecotech leds as well. This tank will be in the living room and it appears that everything in there is on the same circuit. I will be switching the outlets to gfci for the tank.


any input will be greatly appreciated


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Unread 10/24/2011, 05:22 AM   #2
wood0691
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most likely its aleady on a 20ammp breaker, but if you want to have the tank dedicated to only one breaker so you can just kill it when needed then yes but if not i would try to add up what all ison the breaker you are useing and see if it can handle the load.
im going to set mine up on a seperate breaker for just the tank that way i dant have to lose power on everyting in my living room if and when i need to kill the power.
also may help when the power goes out you can put the tank on a small generator if needed.


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Unread 10/24/2011, 05:23 AM   #3
Lorenz725
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I cant tell you if you have to or not but I am running a dedicated breaker today for my tank. I am setting up at 150 and I dont want to have to worry about over loading a breaker. A lot of the tank stuff we run does not take a lot of power the one thing I would worry about is the lighting. Good luck.


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Unread 10/24/2011, 05:25 AM   #4
fishgate
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You really need to add up all the watts of all the devices on this circuit and divide that by 120. That will give you total amps. Your circuit is either 15 or a 20 amps (1800-2400 watts). Also keep in mind that motors draw more power when they start up, so if you are close to the max available power, that could pop the circuit.

Dedicated circuits are always nice, but if you can't do the work yourself, this could be expensive.

If you do decide to run a new line, I'd put at least 2 new lines and of course all should be 20 amp.


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Unread 10/24/2011, 06:32 AM   #5
billdogg
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I have my tanks on dedicated circuits - 2 x 20A per tank, all GFCI protected. I like the 2 seperate circuits so that I can seperate my pumps and heaters between the two - if one trips, it does not take the whole tank with it.

As mentioned above - if you know what you are doing, running a couple new circuits is easy stuff - if you don't, you run the risk of hurting yourself badly or worse. When in doubt, call an electrician!


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Unread 10/24/2011, 10:02 AM   #6
haftafish
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Running two circuits is a great idea. The money you would pay an electrician would be less than most of the stuff you are going to need in equipment and supplies. When you do your calculations for total amps figure on not more then 80% of the rated breaker.


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Unread 10/24/2011, 10:13 AM   #7
T Diddy
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If you are able, a dedicated circuit is a great idea. As mentioned, 2 are better than one. I have a dedicated circuit for my fish room, with 2 outlets spliced off from my office. The sump pump and skimmer run on the office circuit...lighting and powerheads are on the dedicated fish room circuit.


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Unread 10/24/2011, 10:17 AM   #8
thegrun
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Quote:
Originally Posted by haftafish View Post
Running two circuits is a great idea. The money you would pay an electrician would be less than most of the stuff you are going to need in equipment and supplies. When you do your calculations for total amps figure on not more then 80% of the rated breaker.
While you most likely do not need to add an additional line, it is nice to have the security of having a dedicated line. If you are running one new line, it will cost very little to add a second line and splitting pumps to two separate circuits could help you avoid a major problem.


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Unread 10/24/2011, 01:59 PM   #9
HowieB
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I have a chart I keep updated every time I add something. I have 2 dedicated 15 Amp outlets. Seems to be plenty.


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Unread 10/24/2011, 10:52 PM   #10
reefinquisitive
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thank you for the responses im just at the research point at the moment and im trying to cover all my bases once again thank you i appreciate it


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Unread 10/25/2011, 07:14 AM   #11
Jocko
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At the very least, have multiple GFCI outlets. Then you can sort of strategically choose which items go on which outlet. The idea being if one trips, the equipment on the other can keep going. So you can use that to manage how your tank would limp along if either of the outlet were to trip.


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Unread 10/25/2011, 08:44 AM   #12
jerpa
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I would have an additional circuit run even if its not absolutely necessary. Even with led lighting you will still be pulling a large chunk of power when you add everything up. You will have additional load from everything else in your living room so you are going to be close to maxing out the breaker. You don't want someone to blow the breaker whenever they try to vacuum. Even worse the tank runs fine until the day it gets cold and all 3 150W heaters kick on at the same time. Your not home, the breaker is tripped, and your fish are freezing.


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Unread 10/25/2011, 08:55 AM   #13
willy7499
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Have at least one powerhead/pump on a different circuit in case the breaker trips. Water movement is critical to the survival of your livestock.

I agree a heater would be nice but I imagine that you are running your heaters through your Apex, which if Apex goes down without power you don't have heat. I personally don't trust a heater without some sort of separate controller managing it. I had a self managed one malfunction and stay on. That will kill livestock faster than your tank cooling off to room temperature which would take hours typically.


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