<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13268701#post13268701 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Young Frankenstein
not ? thats what the circuit breaker does.
With all due respect, you are rather off base here. It is very uncommon for a circuit breaker to trip due to a partial short. THAT IS WHY GFCI PROTECTION IS MANDATED IN WET AREAS.
A circuit breaker is designed to trip above its RATED current. Lets say you have a 15A branch circuit feeding your heater and submersible pump. Lets say the circuit is loaded to 10A. That leaves 5A of headroom before the breaker will trip. What in the world makes you think ALL faults will be capable of flowing that 5A? It is MORE COMMON for the fault to be partial and NOT trip the circuit breaker. More often than not FAULTS are NOT sufficient to trip a branch circuit breaker. That is why GFCIs are so important.
A faulty pump on one side of the system and a ground probe on the other may only flow a few hundred mA, enough to ELECTROCUTE you, but not nearly enough to trip the breaker.
Saltwater pouring into a powerstrip is more likely to start a fire than it is to trip the breaker.
The fact is that circuit breakers rarely trip due to wiring OR equipment faults. You can visit the NFPA website and read all the statistics that you can get your hands on.
Counting on the conductivity of the saltwater to trip the breaker because a fault flows enough current to drive a 15A or 20A circuit breaker into overload is crazy. It is bad for you and bad for your livestock. PERIOD.
I will make it very clear for you and anybody else reading this thread. There are MANY circumstances where a partial short can cause large currents to potentially flow through your TANK or your BODY. The use of a ground probe WITHOUT a GFCI can be very deadly under many circumstances.
Furthermore, a circuit breaker is NOT designed to protect YOU. It is designed to protect the CIRCUIT. Did I say that
It was infered by your comment that "
. I am 50-50 on that since a ground probe will probably trip the circuit breaker due to over current in some cases. When that comment is taken in context with the rest of your comments regarding this topic. So yes, you DID in effect say that. However, the point of MY comment was to ensure that OTHER people reading this thread have a very clear understanding.
I will point it out again for the benefit of anybody else reading this thread. Circuit breakers are designed to protect the wiring in your home and prevent overheating of the wires. They are not intended to protect humans from shock. That is what a GFCI is designed to do.
I have gone into this more than once with you and I am not planing to doit again. END ON MY PART.....YOU KNOW IT ALL BRO.
Your rude comment was uncalled for.
I can save you the trouble of "getting into it". There is NOTHING to debate here.
1) Many (most) common faults in AND out of the aquarium are NOT sufficient to trip a branch circuit breaker.
2) An aquarium ground probe used WITHOUT GFCI protection of the system creates an ELECTROCTION hazard that was not directly present before introduction of the probe.
It follows that a whenever a ground probe is used in the aquarium, that GFCI protection SHOULD be used on all of the tanks equipment.
You asked for reasons why a GFCI should be used with a ground probe. I KINDLY supplied reasons. If you are able to show me to be wrong, then please KINDLY do so.