So I had a bad shock tonight

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mr.reef24

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Apr 21, 2009
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Came home from my marine society meeting checked my tank's and one tank needed me to fix a overflow that was clogged reached into tank and a horrible stinging pain. So at first I thought I had a cut or touched a bristle-worm looked no cut no bristle worm. Hmmmmmm..... What caused the pain so I went to touch the water and a I touched a little of the water and I got a horrible shocked that actually mad my leg's fell all weird and rubber like. I dont know what to do I have nothing to transfer the coral's in at the moment cause of the electric water and I can't see any fish the snail's and shrimp are alive but can't find any fish. I'm so mad excuse me while I rant hold on :swear: What should I do I am so frustrated that my year's of experience are going blank cause I'm so depressed about it I don't like when thing's go wrong with any tank's????

Mr.Reef24

:(
 
I'm not the brightest bulb in the house but I would start by unplugging everything. After that I would start plugging one component in at a time and then put a finger in there (while my wife watches just in case). I would continue until I found the piece that was leaking electricity. I would also purchase a ground probe.

I know this is my no means a smart decision but I would do it in order to not lose everything in my aquarium. There is probably a much safer way you could do it using a multimeter but I don't know how to do that.

The responsible answer of course is to unplug everything and have an electrician check them out. I doubt that many of us would go that route though.

Also, first unplug your heaters and see if that takes care of your problem. In my experience I have had heaters go bad more than anything else.

Keep in mind do this at your own risk, this is just the way that I would do it.
 
pump or heater or something is shorted out. unplug one thing at a time at you can figure it out. if you are worried after you fix it can buy a grounding probe to ground out stray voltage...

edit: what locel said...:D
 
i just found out my 180gal has lotsa stray voltage too ^^;; it gives me a numbing feeling ... not pain, just like buzzing numbing funky feeling ... doesnt seem to affect my fish ( unless the stray electricity accounts for the mysterious death of two fish ._. ) .... tomorrow imma go get a ground probe , that expensive coralife or kent marine one, dont remember the brand, just remember its expensive x_x...
 
pupumole;3055960; said:
i just found out my 180gal has lotsa stray voltage too ^^;; it gives me a numbing feeling ... not pain, just like buzzing numbing funky feeling ... doesnt seem to affect my fish ( unless the stray electricity accounts for the mysterious death of two fish ._. ) .... tomorrow imma go get a ground probe , that expensive coralife or kent marine one, dont remember the brand, just remember its expensive x_x...


that is the exact how it felt to me like being tasered not that i know ;) but do you feel that a ground probe is gonna eliminate all the stray voltage? I was contemplating on how to find the device causing it and calling the company and getting it replaced.

mr.reef24
 
The ground probe is just a backup. You need to find out what your problem is before it gets worse.
 
From memory im pretty sure the fish dont get shocked because they are not earth, like you would be when standing in front of your tank, i have no knowledge of electrics though and may have made the whole thing up.

Either way becareful mate.
 
fish do get shocked/fried in the sea when lightning strikes, so i'm sure they are also shocked in aquariums.
 
nite;3056689; said:
fish do get shocked/fried in the sea when lightning strikes, so i'm sure they are also shocked in aquariums.

no they don't in both cases
 
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