zanemoseley
New member
Ok I rewired EVERYTHING, I cut off all wirenuts and the grounds and redid them all. I plugged in a brand new gfci and I first threw the switch for the LEFT ballast and it fired fine. Then I threw the switch for the RIGHT one and SNAP goes the GFCI. It's definately the ballast on the right.
Now the question is what to do about it. The transformer is grounded to the case and the caps are mounted the to the sides with velcro but they are resting on the case bottom so they are halfway grounded at least. I would like to eventually use the pipe strapping to strap them directly to the side of the case but in the mean time would this be the culprit for tripping a GFCI? Its pretty squarely resting on the bottom of the case but who knows, it has worked like this for 2 yrs with no problems though.
So do you guys think its just a bad ballast or is it something else like the grounding or something else? I don't have time to day to do the strapping but I have to get a game plan to get this fixed as half my tank is without light.
Thanks for all the help guys.
Also Tammy I owe you an apology about the transformer thing. I did't realize it was a transformer, I thought a ballast was different than a transformer. I should have known when there were different voltage inputs on the "ballast". Sorry.
Now the question is what to do about it. The transformer is grounded to the case and the caps are mounted the to the sides with velcro but they are resting on the case bottom so they are halfway grounded at least. I would like to eventually use the pipe strapping to strap them directly to the side of the case but in the mean time would this be the culprit for tripping a GFCI? Its pretty squarely resting on the bottom of the case but who knows, it has worked like this for 2 yrs with no problems though.
So do you guys think its just a bad ballast or is it something else like the grounding or something else? I don't have time to day to do the strapping but I have to get a game plan to get this fixed as half my tank is without light.
Thanks for all the help guys.
Also Tammy I owe you an apology about the transformer thing. I did't realize it was a transformer, I thought a ballast was different than a transformer. I should have known when there were different voltage inputs on the "ballast". Sorry.