GFCI question

yes that will do the same thing as a gfci outlet would and the 15 amp would work the breaker on that circuit i would guess has a 15 amp anyway
 
Add up the wattage of what you are running in your tank and divide by 96 to determine the amps you need. You also need to consider anything else running on the same breaker.
 
Mag 9.5- 93
ATI sunpower 324
mp40- 28
heater 250 watts
sro 2000 ints 24 watts.

Added all that up and got 7.48 when i divded the total by 96.

I will more then likely add another mp40 and maybe another heater if needed.
 
Add up the wattage of what you are running in your tank and divide by 96 to determine the amps you need. You also need to consider anything else running on the same breaker.

Can you explain why you divide wattage by .96 versus 120v or whatever the voltage is at the wall?
 
Since gfci isn't optional the next best thing is alerting....
Granted a fault condition will kill your tank but at least a Apex or RKL can alert you if you are away and you can plan for such contingencies accordingly...
IMHO the 150 for a Apex is cheap insurance all things considered
 
from what i'm reading, the GFCI plug-in outlet will trip when there's an electricity outage and requires you to press the button to reset. if you're not home, then your tank could be shut down for hours or even days if you're on vacation.

http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2030159

i've been putting it off, but i think i'm just going to have someone install the GFCI breaker.

Thing is; a ground fault will trip whether its at the outlet or the breaker box...

although a few folks over at the Neptune forum did say cheapo Home Depot GFCI's can/will nusiance trip over just noise....

Yeah man, get some protection regardless...you simply can't run a tank w/o a GFCI no matter what....
 
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