I simply posted my observations. The latest incident prompted my post here, but I've seen this happen on at least 3 occasions that I can recall - where I can verify that the same brand of heater was in each tank, and a subsequent discovery of stray voltage occurred some time after HLLE was observed in either tangs or angels (usually Yellow Tangs and/or Coral Beauty Angelfish). These are tanks that my service technician maintains (and I maintained them before her - she's maintained them for the last 5 years for me) - and it struck me as odd that she'd report HLLE in one client's tank, but not in another - maintenance procedures and such were the same - equipment differs from tank to tank but water quality is consistently monitored and maintained. It's not a controlled experiment because each tank belongs to a different keeper but for what we could observe as far as parameters and diet went, all things were fairly equal.
It's taken me a bit to see enough "coincidences" to theorize that there's a connection between the heater leaching voltage and the occurrence of HLLE in these tanks. I would hold the same theory to any other piece of equipment that failed or shorted an continued to "function" while leaching voltage into the tank. I've seen a number of different items fail but in my experience, heaters are the #1 offender - no matter what brand - any glass heater can crack - that's as much "user error" as anything - since the Stealth heaters are shatterproof, I'm not seeing any failures in the casings that are resulting in failures of any sort - they just seem to fail for whatever reason and I'm wondering if it's a manufacturing defect.
I've had plenty of these heaters returned by clients - for the reasons I mentioned - stuck on, stuck off, and some tested for voltage and found the heater to be the culprit, after asking my advice and reporting their own observations to me. I learned years ago that when all else appears to be fine (ie water parameters, appropriate husbandry, good diet) and HLLE or other ailments occur (I've seen ich become a chronic issue too in tanks with stray voltage but that's a whole other post and discussion/debate that I don't care to explore right this moment), it's a good idea to test for voltage, if for no other reason, to rule it out as a possible cause.
My posting wasn't so much about the correlation of HLLE to voltage as such - but it *was* about the reliability of Stealth heaters and that one bit about my anecdotal observation was what you ran with.
If you're interested in how many times I've seen stray voltage from one device or another, and what ailments I've observed that either went away or reversed when the voltage issue was corrected, that's a whole other post.
Given that I have seen so many of this particular brand of heater fail relative to other brands(and yes, there are some that never give anyone a day of trouble), I'm trying to figure out what the "right thing" to do is concerning those of my clients that still have these heaters. The proportion of failures I've seen with this particular brand seems to be more than any other brand I've carried in the last 7 years or so - so I quit carrying them a few years ago. There's still plenty of them out there - and not every client I serve buys everything from me, so there are probably a bunch of them out there that I don't know about.
Let me pose it this way... What would YOU do? Pull all the remaining heaters in your maintenance clients' tanks (I think we have 3 clients left with them - the rest have all failed over the last 4 years or so and have since been replaced with another brand) - or wait for them to fail?
Tell the client and give him/her the informed choice based on my observations? Leave well enough alone, or let's go ahead and change out that heater, "just in case" (bearing in mind that *any* brand can fail...) Or say nothing and play "wait and see"?
I do intend to speak with a UPG rep early next week to see if they've got any new info since the last time I approached one after I'd returned about a dozen of the heaters in the 3 months before I spoke to him - perhaps if they are willing to facilitate a return, I'll pull them and replace them and just let the customer know as a courtesy.
Jenn