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Now my basement is carpeted and I'm not sure how long the cords for the probes are, so I may not be able to reach an outlet. What should I ground to? Is there anything mobile I can use?
I’ve never seen a tank at zero. You’re OK up to a few volts.It should read 0.
All tanks should run a grounding probe.
26 volts….you’ve got a problem. Start unplugging until it drops down to a volt of two.
I’ve never seen a tank at zero. You’re OK up to a few volts.
I respectfully disagree with this. A grounding probe only protects you when you put your hands in the tank. I would rather feel that tingle in my hands to know that I’ve got a voltage leak. Further discussing the probe, it now creates current. Without the probe, there is the presence of voltage but no current. Think of a battery sitting on a shelf….there is voltage but no current. The probe provides the path for there now be current flow. And current is the problem.
If you do want to eliminate stray voltage you will need a GFI and a grounding probe. Do not install a grounding probe without a GFI protecting the power head, reason for that is without grounding anything there is no way out for voltage to ground, therefore you can have 120v in the water without problems, considering there is no ground.Also the water is not shocking me. Isn't this the same concept as birds on high voltage wires? How does just leaky voltage harm my corals?

