skewch
Premium Member
Yet another stray voltage problem 
I have 2 6100's, and the 7095 controller. Tonight while working on the sump, I realized I was getting shocked.
I pulled *everything* electrical out of the sump (sump is located in another room), still got shocked. Both Tunze streams were still running in the tank in the other room.
Unplugged the 6100's, no longer got shocked. I figured it might be the power bar they were plugged into, so I plugged them into another outlet on a different circuit. Got shocked.
Now I was stumped. I had everything electrical out of the sump (probes, pumps, heater, etc.), and the only thing in the tank was the 6100's. I plugged one 6100 in, no shock. I plugged the other one in, shock. I unplugged the first one, still got shocked. Unplugged the second one, plugged the first back in, no shock.
I pulled the pump that seemed to be doing the shocking out, and put it in a bucket with salt water as per previous threads about this. No shock.
I put the pump in question directly in the sump, plugged it in a totally different circuit again, got shocked.
I am stumped. I understand the rationale behind the grounding on the pump which may complete the circuit and cause the shock from some other device which is leaking current, but why do I only see it when the one pump is on, and not the other? Is it possible the pump I think is good is actually the one with the problem, and the one that seems problematic is good?
Both are fairly new, less than a month old. I need help figuring this out
I have 2 6100's, and the 7095 controller. Tonight while working on the sump, I realized I was getting shocked.
I pulled *everything* electrical out of the sump (sump is located in another room), still got shocked. Both Tunze streams were still running in the tank in the other room.
Unplugged the 6100's, no longer got shocked. I figured it might be the power bar they were plugged into, so I plugged them into another outlet on a different circuit. Got shocked.
Now I was stumped. I had everything electrical out of the sump (probes, pumps, heater, etc.), and the only thing in the tank was the 6100's. I plugged one 6100 in, no shock. I plugged the other one in, shock. I unplugged the first one, still got shocked. Unplugged the second one, plugged the first back in, no shock.
I pulled the pump that seemed to be doing the shocking out, and put it in a bucket with salt water as per previous threads about this. No shock.
I put the pump in question directly in the sump, plugged it in a totally different circuit again, got shocked.
I am stumped. I understand the rationale behind the grounding on the pump which may complete the circuit and cause the shock from some other device which is leaking current, but why do I only see it when the one pump is on, and not the other? Is it possible the pump I think is good is actually the one with the problem, and the one that seems problematic is good?
Both are fairly new, less than a month old. I need help figuring this out