Titanium heater vs probe or both?

MichaelClark55

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Feb 23, 2018
Messages
277
Reaction score
228
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have been reading alot of conflicting information on this subject. Some of the more experienced guys have written great articles on this subject but then some of it gets alittle too heady for some of us.

I am Architect and a Builder so I do understand the basics of house wiring but this probe business has gotten me worried a bit.

I would like to make it simple and follow the "if you have a titanium heater" theory that sounds like a probe is not neccessary. Is it truely that simple? The issue I have is I have one outlet close enough to run 2 power strips that runs all the equipment. The labels on the probes state not to plug into a power strip.

I have done some basic calculations to make sure that I am not overloading the circuit that the one outlet runs on. I also have made sure the power strips that I use are rated to carry more than what I have plugged into them.

The other issue is that outlet is NOT GFI. I assume that I can change that breaker at the panel and that will take care of that part. That's straight forward enough, but the probe haunts me a bit since it seems that probes and GFI are not the same issue.

So if I am on a GFI circuit that is NOT overloaded and run at least one ti heater through a power strip rated to handle, have I covered my bases? I have not had any issues with current in the first year of this setup.

Thanks in advance for any advice.
 
I have been reading alot of conflicting information on this subject. Some of the more experienced guys have written great articles on this subject but then some of it gets alittle too heady for some of us.

I am Architect and a Builder so I do understand the basics of house wiring but this probe business has gotten me worried a bit.

I would like to make it simple and follow the "if you have a titanium heater" theory that sounds like a probe is not neccessary. Is it truely that simple? The issue I have is I have one outlet close enough to run 2 power strips that runs all the equipment. The labels on the probes state not to plug into a power strip.

I have done some basic calculations to make sure that I am not overloading the circuit that the one outlet runs on. I also have made sure the power strips that I use are rated to carry more than what I have plugged into them.

The other issue is that outlet is NOT GFI. I assume that I can change that breaker at the panel and that will take care of that part. That's straight forward enough, but the probe haunts me a bit since it seems that probes and GFI are not the same issue.

So if I am on a GFI circuit that is NOT overloaded and run at least one ti heater through a power strip rated to handle, have I covered my bases? I have not had any issues with current in the first year of this setup.

Thanks in advance for any advice.
If your titanium heater has a 3 prong plug then the titanium housing acts just like a ground probe. Some titanium heaters only have a 2 prong plug. If yours fits this category then you would want a separate ground probe.

As for the warning about the ground probe on a power strip, that shouldn't be an issue. A decent UL listed power strip will carry the ground through to the wall. There have been cases where cheap imported power strips didn't have a ground bar in them. That is where the warning comes from. This is a very dangerous situation, with or without a ground probe.
 
If your titanium heater has a 3 prong plug then the titanium housing acts just like a ground probe. Some titanium heaters only have a 2 prong plug. If yours fits this category then you would want a separate ground probe.

As for the warning about the ground probe on a power strip, that shouldn't be an issue. A decent UL listed power strip will carry the ground through to the wall. There have been cases where cheap imported power strips didn't have a ground bar in them. That is where the warning comes from. This is a very dangerous situation, with or without a ground probe.
Awesome, that gives me a lot of confindence coming from you. Thank you for responding.
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 32 45.7%
  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%
Back
Top