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#24
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A ground probe could also save you in the "knock the lights in" situation. If there is a device leaking current into the water the ground probe gives it a path to ground. The "save you" function of a ground probe is pretty simple, that current wants to go to ground and hopefully the probe provides a better way to do that than you do. Talking about a ground probe "removing" stray voltage is also flawed. The assumption is that having this stray current in the tank is bad for the inhabitants but there isn't a lot of proof for it. A leaky device is giving you potential current but it's not until you get a path to ground, ie your probe, that you have current flowing through the water. Think about a bird on a power line. Touching one line, no problem but touch another line or the ground at the same time and you have a big problem. Is potential current or a completed circuit worse for fish and inverts? I don't think there is a definitive answer. The thing that could have saved Steve's critters is both a GFCI and a ground probe. When the heater broke the current would have gone to ground rather than returning on the neutral and it should trip. This probably would have worked but I think you'd have to look far and wide to find many people that use both these devices. |