Tank is a 16g bowfront. When I placed my hand in the tank to adjust something, I noticed a slightly painful tingle on one of my fingers (which happens to have a small cut... I guess that equals less resistance). I do not have a GFCI on this outlet, but I'll be buying one of those plug-in ones from Wal-Mart that I've heard about.
Curious as to what was leaking current into the water, I pulled out my multimeter, placed the positive probe in the water, and the negative into a ground on the outlet. It displayed about 52 volts. 52 volts!?! I'm positive that it was not .52 volts, or 52 millivolts. That was somewhat alarming.
Next, I unplugged everything, at which time the meter showed about 2 - 3 volts. I then started plugging things in one by one (unplugging the last, so that only one thing at a time was plugged in). Here are the readings I got for each (subtracting out the 2 - 3 volts that was indicated when nothing was plugged in)...
Air pump: .5v
Light hood (a single strip fluorescent): 15v
HOB filter: 6v
Small internal filter: 29v
50w heater: 15v
25w heater: 32v
All those add up to almost 100 volts when plugged in individually, even though "only" about 50 volts is present when everything is plugged in. To confirm the meter was working properly, I measured an outlet directly, and it showed about 119v. These are all new (less than 6 months old) items.
Any ideas as to what all this means? I'm kinda freaked out now.
--Mike
Curious as to what was leaking current into the water, I pulled out my multimeter, placed the positive probe in the water, and the negative into a ground on the outlet. It displayed about 52 volts. 52 volts!?! I'm positive that it was not .52 volts, or 52 millivolts. That was somewhat alarming.
Next, I unplugged everything, at which time the meter showed about 2 - 3 volts. I then started plugging things in one by one (unplugging the last, so that only one thing at a time was plugged in). Here are the readings I got for each (subtracting out the 2 - 3 volts that was indicated when nothing was plugged in)...
Air pump: .5v
Light hood (a single strip fluorescent): 15v
HOB filter: 6v
Small internal filter: 29v
50w heater: 15v
25w heater: 32v
All those add up to almost 100 volts when plugged in individually, even though "only" about 50 volts is present when everything is plugged in. To confirm the meter was working properly, I measured an outlet directly, and it showed about 119v. These are all new (less than 6 months old) items.
Any ideas as to what all this means? I'm kinda freaked out now.
--Mike