Any way around this other than an electrician?They are both not grounded is my guess
Any way around this other than an electrician?They are both not grounded is my guess
Not the heaters. I have 2 and even with them both unplugged I feel it. It happens when either of my outlets are plugged in so I think it may be an outlet issue.Might want to get a cheap grounding probe from amazon in the mean time. I read you can connect them to a metal screw if your outlet is not grounded. I would also check your heater/s first, they are the most likely to leak electricity, a lot of cheap ones do that, even when off.
I guess it could be from a broken outlet cover where the current travels down the line into your tank, but that's doubtful. It probably is something in your tank that is leaking current originating at the outlet. Do you have a UV sterilizer, I had a electric leak from a bad one of those once.Not the heaters. I have 2 and even with them both unplugged I feel it. It happens when either of my outlets are plugged in so I think it may be an outlet issue.
I doubt it, but a grounding probe may. Definitely your cheapest option so would try one of them first.After some experimenting with a multimeter i set up in the tank and grounded, it appears there is no one item that is contributing to the stray voltage. The largest is my return pump. which is about 10 of the 30 volts. Does it still mean there is some 'major issue' if I cannot locate one item causes it. It just seems like everything is slightly contributing to it. Will having an electrician ground the outlet remedy this?
will this make a difference if my outlet itself isn’t grounded though? Because i presume this just plugs into an outlet and the item presumes the outlet is grounded and then grounds it from there?I doubt it, but a grounding probe may. Definitely your cheapest option so would try one of them first.
Amazon.com: Rio RV2735 Rid-Volt Titanium Grounding Probe : Pet Supplies
Amazon.com: Rio RV2735 Rid-Volt Titanium Grounding Probe : Pet Supplieswww.amazon.com
It says you can connect the ring that's on the plug to the screw in your outlet or other metal object if your outlet is not groundedwill this make a difference if my outlet itself isn’t grounded though? Because i presume this just plugs into an outlet and the item presumes the outlet is grounded and then grounds it from there?
will this make a difference if my outlet itself isn’t grounded though? Because i presume this just plugs into an outlet and the item presumes the outlet is grounded and then grounds it from there?
Man thats alot of voltage to be passed to the tank.I think there's a combination of things going on here from my experimentation but I think it may have to do with Apex. When I have my COR-20 connected to the apex with the aquabus cable I read 29 volts, but when I unplug that aquabus I read only 17 volts (I can still feel this though). However, I think somehow some way my lights are also contributing because no matter what combination of things I have plugged in I end up reading some voltage. The largest difference I can find though is the aquabus cable between the COR controller and energy bar. I think this may be extra weird because I have apex things plugged into both outlets and they can both end up powering the energy bar.
If you don’t mind it why worry? That’s assuming you’re some sort of superhero that can’t die.Is having stray voltage in the tank a big issue? I'm really having trouble locating what's causing it. I'm able to get an electrician to come out tomorrow to work on the outlet though
If you don’t mind it why worry? That’s assuming you’re some sort of superhero that can’t die.
Even a small amount of electricity can stop a human’s heart; perhapnot your heart but how about someone else visiting and sticking a hand in there?
It’s one or two pieces of equipment causing the stray voltage.