breutus
Don't ask me, I'm wrong.
Okay, so I was playing around with the tank tonight and I got a small shock again when I put my hand in. This is pretty normal for my tank I don't have a grounding probe because I have always thought I didn't want to give the tank a ground to actually start shocking everything, though this point I am not sure of, since if I am getting electricity in I would figure there is a ground point for it to go out on. So I don't know, maybe it is still shocking everything in the tank. Either way a ground probe does not seem like the answer IMHO getting the electricity out does (easy said then done).
But I decided I was gonna stick a volt meter to the tank and see how much voltage I was getting. I stuck one end in the ground prong of the nearest outlet and the other in my tank water and :eek2: WOW, I was expecting to see maybe 5 or 6 volts but instead I read 30 volts!!!
I did end up tracing down most of the sources and am fixing them but some of it is not going to be easily gotten rid of being its my main pump and stuff.
What I am really curios about is what everyone else's is reading at? what is acceptable voltage in the tank
If some of the guys on here that have established tanks, that there corals are doing well in, could stick a volt meter in there tank and give me a reading it would be much appreciated, Just make sure you don't have a grounding probe attached when you do your reading.
I would like to also know everyones thought on the grounding probe issue here especially some of the electricians on the board. Is it better to put a ground source and make Voltage flow to it? Wouldn't there still be a ground point if the electricity makes it into the tank? Doesn't a ground probe just make sure everything in the tank is getting shocked
Sorry for the long winded post Just really curious about this!
But I decided I was gonna stick a volt meter to the tank and see how much voltage I was getting. I stuck one end in the ground prong of the nearest outlet and the other in my tank water and :eek2: WOW, I was expecting to see maybe 5 or 6 volts but instead I read 30 volts!!!
I did end up tracing down most of the sources and am fixing them but some of it is not going to be easily gotten rid of being its my main pump and stuff.
What I am really curios about is what everyone else's is reading at? what is acceptable voltage in the tank
If some of the guys on here that have established tanks, that there corals are doing well in, could stick a volt meter in there tank and give me a reading it would be much appreciated, Just make sure you don't have a grounding probe attached when you do your reading.
I would like to also know everyones thought on the grounding probe issue here especially some of the electricians on the board. Is it better to put a ground source and make Voltage flow to it? Wouldn't there still be a ground point if the electricity makes it into the tank? Doesn't a ground probe just make sure everything in the tank is getting shocked
Sorry for the long winded post Just really curious about this!