eznet2u
Active member
I would like to say up front, that I LOVE Marine Depot.:love1:
I have bought 90% of my stuff through you guys. I recommend
you to whomever will listen.
Now, enough sucking up...on to the problem....
I have had a terrible time keeping coral alive in my tank for the past 5
months. I lost several colonies of SPS to RTN. Everything else has just
been slowly dying while I have tried everything to save them...
Tonight I was doing a water change/sump cleaning. I have a tiny nick on
my left hand. When I reached into the sump to pull out the skimmer for
cleaning...It lit me up! :eek1::eek2:
Through the process of elimination, I was able to find out that the stray
voltage was coming from one of my Korallia 4's. (Don't ask how I figured
this out).
I have 2 of the very first models that came out. I know that there was a
problem with this on some of the early models, but thought that it was
limited to the smaller Korallias. If I reach into the tank with my right
hand, it is unnoticeable.
Is there a way of fixing it?
I have bought 90% of my stuff through you guys. I recommend
you to whomever will listen.
Now, enough sucking up...on to the problem....
I have had a terrible time keeping coral alive in my tank for the past 5
months. I lost several colonies of SPS to RTN. Everything else has just
been slowly dying while I have tried everything to save them...
Tonight I was doing a water change/sump cleaning. I have a tiny nick on
my left hand. When I reached into the sump to pull out the skimmer for
cleaning...It lit me up! :eek1::eek2:
Through the process of elimination, I was able to find out that the stray
voltage was coming from one of my Korallia 4's. (Don't ask how I figured
this out).
I have 2 of the very first models that came out. I know that there was a
problem with this on some of the early models, but thought that it was
limited to the smaller Korallias. If I reach into the tank with my right
hand, it is unnoticeable.
Is there a way of fixing it?