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#11
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TheRock wrote:
Electricity, I'll second this one. I've been zapped twice in 6 weeks. I do have a ground fault interrupt circuit installed now and avoid puddles around the tank. --Kurt |
#12
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OH YEAH...most important sir !
I've tripped a few over the years. "KurtG" wrote in message .. . TheRock wrote: Electricity, I'll second this one. I've been zapped twice in 6 weeks. I do have a ground fault interrupt circuit installed now and avoid puddles around the tank. --Kurt |
#13
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KurtG wrote:
I do have a ground fault interrupt circuit installed now and avoid puddles around the tank. Be careful anyway. I had a plumbing leak a month or so back that put water into one of my power strips. It tripped the GFCI, just like it was supposed to do. I cleaned up and dried everything out (I thought) and reset the GFCI. Everything was up and running and I was feeling a little better when I noticed that the power strip was spitting out sparks. GFCI units aren't infallible. George Patterson Forgive your enemies. But always remember who they are. |
#14
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"George Patterson" wrote in message news:%plkh.1281$Ej7.937@trnddc02...
Be careful anyway. I had a plumbing leak a month or so back that put water into one of my power strips. It tripped the GFCI, just like it was supposed to do. I cleaned up and dried everything out (I thought) and reset the GFCI. Everything was up and running and I was feeling a little better when I noticed that the power strip was spitting out sparks. GFCI units aren't infallible. Well, this was not fault of GFCI - they cannot detect short between line and neutral. They are only sensitive to the current leakage from line to ground. More precise: they trip when the current in the white wire does not equal the current in the black wire - the difference happens only when the current is leaking to ground - it is that simple. |
#15
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George Patterson wrote:
Be careful anyway. Oh yeah. I had two separate 10 gallon leaks and it leaked into the wall and floor where another circuit ran. The tank was grounded, so standing in the puddle and then touching the tank I felt the familiar tingling through the fingers. Been zapped more then I care to admit while wiring up 440V motors. Slow learner. :-) --Kurt |
#16
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I think the best advice is to wear gloves when putting your hands in the
tank. The only time I have ever been "harmed" by anything in a SW/reef tank is when I didn't follow this advice. Admittedly, I rarely do. ;-) I got a farily nasty sting once from a large carpet anenome, and have spent a few hours removing bristle worm stings from finger tips with scotch tape. A lot also depends on what you keep. If you keep Coral Cats, Lionfish, or other venomous critters, you obviously have to be a bit more aware. With a normal "reef" tank, the danger is minimal. We've had SW/reef tanks going on 18 years now, and have never suffered any serious "hazard" -- well, unless you count the financial hazards. ;-) My children love to have the cleaner shrimp "clean" their fingers. (Yep, no gloves, just a good washing afterward). ~T "RubenD" wrote in message et... I was talking the other day with a friend about getting a tank a Xmas gift but then we got into hazards which I didn't want to be liable for. He mentioned from skin to respiratory issues. I know is silly but I have to ask. I'm not giving up my tank but got concerns about my kids. I believe most marine organism would die out water, but you know better than me. I'm talking about the standard raw tank without those UV filters. What are the chances of people getting diseases/parasites from a fish tank since we are kind of breeding them in a closed enviroment, and what are we more expose to?. TIA Ruben |
#17
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"Teri G." wrote in message . ..
My children love to have the cleaner shrimp "clean" their fingers. (Yep, no gloves, just a good washing afterward). Check this out, Teri: http://www.reefkeeping.com/issues/20...ture/index.php |
#18
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Yuck & ouch. Appreciate the article.
Teri http://home.comcast.net/~76fxe "Pszemol" wrote in message ... "Teri G." wrote in message . .. My children love to have the cleaner shrimp "clean" their fingers. (Yep, no gloves, just a good washing afterward). Check this out, Teri: http://www.reefkeeping.com/issues/20...ture/index.php |
#19
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"Teri G." wrote in message . ..
Yuck & ouch. Appreciate the article. Do not panick - this must be very, very rare... I put my bare hands to the tank water for many, many countles years and nothing happened to me ... yet :-) All people swiming and playing in the ocean would risk the same infections but this does not stop them surfing or diving, right ? So let's not panick... |
#20
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Thanks, no - I won't panic. I've probably put my hands in SW/reef tanks
hundreds if not thousands of time, and remain unscathed. I don't, if I have any open cuts/scratches, and always wash well afterwards. From the article: "Closed aquatic systems with a high density of fish and warm waters (Hint, hint; this is another way of saying your average everyday home aquarium) appear to be conditions particularly favorable to this infectious agent. ". I'd have to argue that we have never had a "high density" of fish, though there are those that would say that any closed system contains a higher density than the ocean. Although we do plan to eventually add more fish, right now we only have 2 Tangs, and a Scissortail dartfish. That's in a 180g with a 100g sump. Anyway, it's worth being cautious. Information is always good. Teri http://home.comcast.net/~76fxe "Pszemol" wrote in message ... "Teri G." wrote in message . .. Yuck & ouch. Appreciate the article. Do not panick - this must be very, very rare... I put my bare hands to the tank water for many, many countles years and nothing happened to me ... yet :-) All people swiming and playing in the ocean would risk the same infections but this does not stop them surfing or diving, right ? So let's not panick... |
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