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On 2010-04-06 07:59:11 -0400, "John Smith" said:
Probably already know the answer to this, but thought I'd check here just in case. About 7 or 8 years ago I got a Visitherm 100W tank heater and was running it without incident for a few years. Sometime after, this tank was switched to holding coldwater species and instead of removing the heater from the tank, I just left it unplugged. Now, I'm not sure if there's an optical illusion or something, and although I have fairly good eyesight, it looks to me like there is water in there at the bottom. I did test the heater by switching it on across an RCD and it behaved as normal. I didn't see the water touch the heating element though, and I wasn't going to be handling it whilst in these circumstances. Can there really be water in there, I thought these things were 100% waterproof, even after all this time? Nothing is going to be 100% waterproof forever. At some point it will leak or the heating element will fail. If you have water in therem get rid of it before it makes contact with the heating element and shorts out your house, or electrocutes you fish. Andy |
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On Apr 26, 11:52*am, Andy Pastuszak wrote:
On 2010-04-06 07:59:11 -0400, "John Smith" said: Probably already know the answer to this, but thought I'd check here just in case. About 7 or 8 years ago I got a Visitherm 100W tank heater and was running it without incident for a few years. Sometime after, this tank was switched to holding coldwater species and instead of removing the heater from the tank, I just left it unplugged. Now, I'm not sure if there's an optical illusion or something, and although I have fairly good eyesight, it looks to me like there is water in there at the bottom. I did test the heater by switching it on across an RCD and it behaved as normal. I didn't see the water touch the heating element though, and I wasn't going to be handling it whilst in these circumstances. Can there really be water in there, I thought these things were 100% waterproof, even after all this time? Nothing is going to be 100% waterproof forever. *At some point it will leak or the heating element will fail. *If you have water in therem get rid of it before it makes contact with the heating element and shorts out your house, or electrocutes you fish. Andy- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Do you hoonnestly htink for one ****ing minute the OP is still waiting here for a ****ing answer you dip****? This is a clothing and shoe and other import sales group now, take a hike or buy something. You sound just like the ones that used to think they owned these groups........They are under new management get the **** over it Andy! |
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