reef tank 2.0
Member
You know, something else occurred to me, just as I was starting this thread. Allow me to give you a rundown of the history
The following issues are coming from my salt water mixing bin....
A few weeks ago, I was doing a water change, like normal. I'd pump the water out of my water bin, in to the display tank. During this process, I will usually do a little housekeeping and tinker while it's filling. THis time, while doing so, I stuck my hands in the water and was shocked immediately. scared the you know what out of me. Never been shocked before. That shock obviously tripped the GFI outlet and breaker. After doing some troubleshooting, the issue was coming from the return pump in the salt bin, that I used to pump the water to the display tank. That was the only thing running in that bin at the time, so it was rather easy to diagnose. After that happened, I removed the pump, and placed in a back up pump that I have on reserve for the display tank. Placed that in the bin, continued the filling up process, and had zero issues. So in my mind......faulty pump.
couple weeks after that (last weekend), I was filling up the salt bin with water, and checking salinity to bring it up to level, for the upcoming water change. While messing with this bin, I got a tingling shock, very small, once again. I unplugged the heater, and was still getting shocked. I proceeded to unplug the powerhead and the shock went away. Plugged the heater back in, and nothing. Plugged the powerhead back in and got shocked. So I figured the powerhead went bad. Swapped it out for another one, and looked like we were back in business. no shocks, went on my marry way.
today, was doing a small water change in my QT tank, from this same salt bin. I was filling a 5 gallon bucket with water, that I use to pour in to the QT. I touched the on/off valve that had water coming from it, and felt another shocking tingle. ***. So my mind went right to the powerhead, that I just replaced last weekend. I unplugged both the heater and powerhead, and shock went away. plugged the heater in, nothing. plugged the powerhead in, and got a small tingle.
I have a freshwater bin, and a saltwater bin, side by side. they both have heaters and powerheads running at the same time, plugged in to a powerstrip on the wall.
I first thought, well, the powerstrip is rather old (few years), maybe that's the issue. Swapped it out for a new one (new new). After swapping it out, touched the fresh water bin, and nothing. That was good. Touched the saltwater bin, zap. so it wasnt the power strip. I put the other strip back in place. plugged everything in except the power head. no shock. plugged the power head back in, zap. so I am running powerheadless in the salt bin at the moment.
so, this is where you come in. What can possibly be happening that would cause these powerheads to become faulty? Is it the powerhead? could it be something else? I am at a loss here.
I tried to cover all details. If there are questions remaining, please ask
the DT, QT, and water bins all run from the same breaker/circuit in the panel. If that matters
The following issues are coming from my salt water mixing bin....
A few weeks ago, I was doing a water change, like normal. I'd pump the water out of my water bin, in to the display tank. During this process, I will usually do a little housekeeping and tinker while it's filling. THis time, while doing so, I stuck my hands in the water and was shocked immediately. scared the you know what out of me. Never been shocked before. That shock obviously tripped the GFI outlet and breaker. After doing some troubleshooting, the issue was coming from the return pump in the salt bin, that I used to pump the water to the display tank. That was the only thing running in that bin at the time, so it was rather easy to diagnose. After that happened, I removed the pump, and placed in a back up pump that I have on reserve for the display tank. Placed that in the bin, continued the filling up process, and had zero issues. So in my mind......faulty pump.
couple weeks after that (last weekend), I was filling up the salt bin with water, and checking salinity to bring it up to level, for the upcoming water change. While messing with this bin, I got a tingling shock, very small, once again. I unplugged the heater, and was still getting shocked. I proceeded to unplug the powerhead and the shock went away. Plugged the heater back in, and nothing. Plugged the powerhead back in and got shocked. So I figured the powerhead went bad. Swapped it out for another one, and looked like we were back in business. no shocks, went on my marry way.
today, was doing a small water change in my QT tank, from this same salt bin. I was filling a 5 gallon bucket with water, that I use to pour in to the QT. I touched the on/off valve that had water coming from it, and felt another shocking tingle. ***. So my mind went right to the powerhead, that I just replaced last weekend. I unplugged both the heater and powerhead, and shock went away. plugged the heater in, nothing. plugged the powerhead in, and got a small tingle.
I have a freshwater bin, and a saltwater bin, side by side. they both have heaters and powerheads running at the same time, plugged in to a powerstrip on the wall.
I first thought, well, the powerstrip is rather old (few years), maybe that's the issue. Swapped it out for a new one (new new). After swapping it out, touched the fresh water bin, and nothing. That was good. Touched the saltwater bin, zap. so it wasnt the power strip. I put the other strip back in place. plugged everything in except the power head. no shock. plugged the power head back in, zap. so I am running powerheadless in the salt bin at the moment.
so, this is where you come in. What can possibly be happening that would cause these powerheads to become faulty? Is it the powerhead? could it be something else? I am at a loss here.
I tried to cover all details. If there are questions remaining, please ask
the DT, QT, and water bins all run from the same breaker/circuit in the panel. If that matters
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