House fire narrowly averted!!!

jjjimmy

Premium Member
As many of you know, I just recently finished a major lighting upgrade.earlier this week. I do not think that the upgrade itself was the problem but the act of doing the upgrade.

I needed to stay late at work today and around 5:30 my wife calls me. She says "it smells like something is burning and I am not sure what. I do not think that you have to come home right away but I wanted you to be aware so that you could check it out when you get home."

Well something just didn't sound right, so I left anyway. Traffic was an absolute bear with Lake Cook road being closed for the summer. When I finally got home, I went right under the tank to check out the ballasts and wiring (thinking that it was just the news ballasts burning in). Low and behold, to my horror, there is a glowing connector. As carefully and quickly as I could, I pulled out the glowing connector while trying to unplug all of the ballasts with my other hand. Within 30 seconds, the connector flashed into fire. At this point, being careful was no longer an option. I "yanked" out all of the plugs for the lights and was able to blow out the connector fire avoiding total disaster.

Once everything (including myself) had calmed down, I took a further look. The root cause was not the wiring but a new slow leak from my left side return line bulkhead fitting. It had created a puddle where the connectors for this particular ballast was laying. We all no that water (especially saltwater) does not mix with electricity. I called a good friend of mine right after and he is coming by in the morning with a new bulkhead fitting and is going to fix the leak.

This whole event really opened up my eyes to keeping electrical equipment under the tank. I will only be keeping the bare minimum under there and definitely hung up off of the floor. Saturday, I will undertake the job of relocating all of the ballsasts to the basement, far away from the tank. All connectors will be secured, taped and I am going to try to find some type of water seal for wiring.

In closing, we all love this hobby a great deal but sometimes some of us don't think about taking the extra step for safety. You can replace your tank and equipment. You can replace your livestock. You cannot replace your family. Please all of you, take a few moments to double check your equipment and make sure that everything is out of harms way.

Jimmy
 
Holy crap. Good save.

Just think if traffic wouldnt have been so bad and you would have gotten home when the connector wasnt glowing red and then you would have assumed the ballasts were just burining in. I would be donating my hotel points.

Its always a real eye opener when something like this happens and hopefully other people can learn from this incident. Good Luck and If you need any help im avaliable all weekend.

Thanks for the frags there looking great.

Aaron
 
dream

dream

good catch. I have always wanted to install those industrial sprinklers in the ceilings above my tanks. Fire always scares me with that much electric mixed with saltwater:rolleyes:
 
JJJimy,

You owe the wife
(and yourself) a really good bottle of wine.......I am glad your all ok!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
JJJimmy, I can help you out with the waterproofing. shoot me a PM if you are still looking for something to use on the electrical connections.

Good call deciding to head home, could have been a real disaster.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7525799#post7525799 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by jdieck
I will assume you did not have functioning GFCIs?

Jim glad to hear everything is okay. Electrical fires are not joke!

i would check into the GFCI's? if wet they will trip.....granite no more power, but thats what you want!

i felt the same on the power under the tank....95% of all my electrical is in the basement for me now....i even installed 2 extra circut breakers as well as added GFCI outlets to the mix.

Hope you get it all worked out..>>>

I agree, take your wife to dinner!

Happy Friday!

Rich K.
 
Jimmy,
Holy crap. Glad everyone is ok. If you need any help with the ballast relocation let me know.

Tom
 
Aaron and Tom, I will be working on the relocation tomorrow late morning/early afternoon. Extra help is always welcome and you guys know that I will gladly make it worth your time.

Give me a call tomorrow.

847-542-9334

Thanks,

Jimmy
 
Man , good thing you followed your 6 sence. Take the whole family out for a long vacation............ PEACE
 
This is too weird, while I was reading Jimmy's post earlier, I kept getting a wiff of that Electric burning smell. Went into the other room by the tank and smelled it strong but couldn't figure out what was causing it. Took a while but saw a little white smoke coming from my sump, the feed pump for my calium reactor was going to burn up, so I'm lucky too.
 
I had the same think happen last summer, I came home and found my tank overflowing on to a power strip. uh oh! We too were lucky, now I've invested in GFCI's! It's hard to say but I'd rather lose my tank than my house or dogs.
 
Make sure you get high grade commerical GFCI's...the cheap ones don't always trip like they should...better safe than sorry. Glad you caught it before anything worse happened. I went out and got a small fire extinguisher to keep near the tanks after reading this post. My electric stuff is already out from under the tank....with the hubby and son both electricians they weren't going to let me do otherwise. Thanks for the heads up Jim
 
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