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If you have any device leaking elektricity to the water, and you are
affraid of negative effects on your tank inhabitants, the grounding probe will make things even worse. It will INCREASE the current flowing from the failed device to the ground through the water column. Without the probe, the resistance of glass, wood is high enought to make the current flow almost zero. The probe will lower this resistance to zero and current will be limited only with the weak resistance of broken insulation of the device. If you narrowed the problem to the light fixture I would look to this really closer. Does it have metal reflector? Is it correctly grounded? Lights usualy radiate some electricity to water, but if the fixture is designed correctly it is negligible. Do one test: disconnect the probe from ground and put a multimeter in series with it on a AC current settings. If you measure less then 1mA I would not worry about. If it is more than that I would fix your lights. Let me give you an example - the original fluorescent fixture from CustomSeaLights causes readings on a level about 0.2mA. DIY fixture I made with my friend gives reading 0.8mA when one lamp is on and 1.6mA when both lamps are on. This is a reason for us to redesign reflector and replace glass mirror with grounded polished aluminium. In your case I would fix the light fixture and I would get rid of the probe for sure. In a matter of your GFCI plug - what is it rated for? 5-6mA? Or maybe bigger? 1mA current is detectable by human skin. 5mA is already very painful. GFCI plug will not react to very small currents. wrote in message ... Just wondering here...I put a ground probe in one of my tanks and hooked it up to a GFCI outlet. I was feeling some shocks when I touched the water. I narrowed the problem down to the lighting. Anyway, the GFCI never tripped. I thought aside from supposedly ridding the tank of stray voltage, that it would also trip the GFCI when the water is touched. I guess not? What's the deal? |
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Well, I thought the outlet was a GFCI since it was in my kitchen not too far
from an actual GFCI outlet. I just tested that one and it did not shut off the outlet at the tank. Guess I'll be changing that outlet today...although I think I have a portable GFCI I can attach for now. It's only a temporary setup for an injured fish. It's a 25 gallon tank with an Eclipse hood and it's that light that was causing the little shocks. Probably because some water got inside it. It's a big puffer in there and he splashes allot. So, anyway I'll just keep the light unplugged for now. I'm sure it's fine and just needs to dry out. You're answer though does lead me to another question with my big tank. I have that on a GFCI outlet (for sure) with 2 power strips plugged into that. The ground probe is plugged into one of the power strips. Will the probe still trip the GFCI before I stick my hand in or must it be plugged directly into the outlet, not the power strip. Thanks! "Brian C. Attwood" wrote in message ... wrote: Just wondering here...I put a ground probe in one of my tanks and hooked it up to a GFCI outlet. I was feeling some shocks when I touched the water. I narrowed the problem down to the lighting. Anyway, the GFCI never tripped. I thought aside from supposedly ridding the tank of stray voltage, that it would also trip the GFCI when the water is touched. I guess not? What's the deal? The GFCI will only protect you against leaking devices that are plugged into the GFCI. It does not really matter if ground probe is plugged into the GFCI or not, because the GFCI compares the current in the hot and neutral wires to detect a fault rather than monitoring the ground wire. The ground probe merely provides a means for a bad device to leak to ground and trip the GFCI before you stick your hand in. I would suggest that you make sure that ALL devices are plugged into the GFCI, otherwise you are not fully covered. If it still does not trip I would check to make sure the GFCI is wired correctly. |
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In article , Pszemol wrote:
In your case I would fix the light fixture and I would get rid of the probe for sure. Do not get rid of the ground probe. It could save your life. All sal****er tanks should have a ground probe. |
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"SG" wrote in message ...
In article , Pszemol wrote: In your case I would fix the light fixture and I would get rid of the probe for sure. Do not get rid of the ground probe. It could save your life. All sal****er tanks should have a ground probe. GFCI saves life... Grounding probe is designed just to keep your fish from getting sick from stray voltages - but I guess it is only a marketing thing rather than a real deal... because the real thing is that grounding probe is making things worse for your fish. It creates stray currents which are far worse than stray voltages for a living things. But this is only IMHO. I would be happy to hear from you about grounding probe saving lives... please explain how does it do it? |
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GFCI saves life... Grounding probe is designed just to keep
your fish from getting sick from stray voltages - but I guess it is only a marketing thing rather than a real deal... because the real thing is that grounding probe is making things worse for your fish. It creates stray currents which are far worse than stray voltages for a living things. But this is only IMHO. I would be happy to hear from you about grounding probe saving lives... please explain how does it do it? it saves the lives of my blue spot stingray ![]() i went through a un commented number of them after I got my first, the tank is outside, and they would not do well, I bought that tank used, with the ray, it took only a few days to kill it, and the next ...... there was very very little stray voltage leaking from something but it was bothering him, now the probe, and cooler temps and ive been keeping the same one for a while ill have to dig out dates but I think its over a year now. I would suspect that a grounding probe **WITH** a GFCI would do a good job at sending that stray current away from the guy with his hand in his tank, between the time that the shock occurs and the GFCI trips, but read into that third word suspect in this statement as I have no proof either way. just seems the probe is a much less resistant path then a guy with his arm in a tank -- richard reynolds |
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it saves the lives of my blue spot stingray
![]() i went through a un commented number of them after I got my first, the tank is outside, and they would not do well, I bought that tank used, with the ray, it took only a few days to kill it, and the next ...... there was very very little stray voltage leaking from something but it was bothering him, now the probe, and cooler temps and ive been keeping the same one for a while ill have to dig out dates but I think its over a year now. So you are saying, that grounding water column and leading much stronger electric current out of this failured device to ground, through the water and the stingray was better than leaving voltage not grounded? It does not make sense - try to imagine birds sitting on a 20kV wire hanging between hig-voltage poles. Do they feel stray voltage around them in the air? On their legs? NOT! They would certainly feel it when somebody would aproach them with a something like a "grounding probe". Their would become a nice, birdy fireworks :-) The same works with water, stray voltage in the water, and leading these voltages to ground with a grounding probe. Basicaly, the interest of normally grounded human (shoes?) putting his hand into the water and acting as a poor grounding probe conflicts with the interest of fish inside the tank. Fish do not want any grounding probe in their tank, like birds sitting on 20kV wire do not want any grounding probes near them. I would suspect that a grounding probe **WITH** a GFCI would do a good job at sending that stray current away from the guy with his hand in his tank, between the time that the shock occurs and the GFCI trips, but read into that third word suspect in this statement as I have no proof either way. just seems the probe is a much less resistant path then a guy with his arm in a tank As I said - there are two different aspects of this issue and both need to be discussed separatelly. In my opinion, I am sufficiently protected against being electocuted by the GFCI plug and I do not need additional grounding probe. In this case I would not install one to not put miliamps not tripping GFCI going through the bodies of my fish inside the tank. Yes, I will risk being stung by the small voltage not tripping GFCI normally, showing itself as a stray voltage, but I would take this risk just to not make any currents flow in the water column. Bottom line: GFCI - big YES, Grounding Probe - big NO! |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
grounding probes | Dinky | General | 1 | October 15th 03 08:59 PM |
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