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#1
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![]() I used to have a T8 canopy light fixture sitting on top of my refugium/QT that was producing stray voltage in the tank. I don't know exactly how that was happening, as the canopy was not in contact with the water, just sitting on top of the glass tank. It was plastic, too. But when I turned it off the stray voltage would disappear, so it was definitely happening.
I also had a few different pumps that would produce stray voltage, so now just have ground probes in everything. No more stray voltage.
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#2
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![]() Stray voltage can be introduced my leaking through the wire's insulation, or by Induction. Ballast have a huge magnetic field. And properties in your tank, can react and make electricity by a induced magnetic field into the metals in your tank.
I've been shocked off metal structures that were beside Flourescent lights before. The Ballast was inducing about 90v into the metal. Not much current, enough to just feel a little tingle, but it was there. Ground probes are good. That's also a reason we ground copper water pipes in your house. Electricity running in wires beside the pipes, can induce voltages into the pipes.
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Dan Pesonen Umm, a tank or 5 |
#3
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![]() I assume you are testing wrt ground (one leas connected to an outlet ground)
there is always noise from the electromagnets in motors and you should see it drop as you test farther away from pumps. 35V sounds like broken insulation though, is there any current when you test? |
#4
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![]() Quote:
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