Thanks everyone for your input! Nice to have some good heads to pick!
OK!!! So after some suggestions and a bit more research/experimentation these are my findings…..
1.
I asked a friend of mine who is an electrical engineer & electrician and he told me:
Running two GFIs in the same line will NOT cause anything funny to happen, it Is simply not necessary in most instances….
My logic for having 2:
Of all the equipment in the tank the lights are the most complex, there-for I reasoned there is a higher chance of them leaking power, etc… and tripping a GFI. By placing the lights on a separate GFI I was simply hoping to avoid this scenario: I leave home for a few days, the lights pop the GFI, all pumps heaters etc are also killed, and I have no fish when I get home… By adding a backup GFI in the line, if the lights were to pop the GFI the rest of the tank would remain operational, so its sort of a redundancy thing…
2.
I opened the box that houses my ballasts and was able to find the following when running things through both GFIs:
I can run the fans for an indefinite period of time with no inherent issues…
I can run the Right ballast with no inherent issues….
I can run the Left ballast with no inherent issues….
IF I run BOTH ballasts at the same time THEN I get the closest GFI tripping… Regardless if it is on a single or a dual GFI…
This leads me to the question and hopefully someone can tell me: what is the Power Factor (PF) for a PL-PAC- 400MH at startup, as well as all the way up until the bulbs are at temperature?
Or more specifically how many amps would 2 units pull at peak and contin? And before someone give me I=E/P remember this is single phase AC and im betting there are a few capacitors and resistors in these ballasts so I “think” I should be using I=P÷(E x PF)
BTW if there is an expert out there that is looking at this and shaking her/his head Please let me know,
I could be totally out to lunch with these formulas.
So at this point Im thinking exactally what Galaxy said.... That the GFIs are tripping because the current pull as the ballasts are warming up is too great, Apparently a GFI WILL trip if feels an unsafe current draw… the GFIs I am using are rated for 15 Amps contin and 20 amps peak….
I did everything with 10Gauge cable and at the moment things are just on a 15 amp braker "Crosses fingures" HOWEVER the tank WILL be on a dedicated 30 amp line and a dedicted 20 amp line when I finally finish my renovations and managed to string new conduit to the room that its going in...
So I think Ill probabbly just have to either add a second timer, and stagger the start times, OR get a third GFI and run each light off of one, AND wire each one individually straight into the 30 AMP line...
Thanks guys!!!!!
-----------------------------------
Iv had a few PMs about the funny plumbing so here is a post on the topic:
All of those hoses btw are for running the pumps etc… I built things so I could plum the tank into street water and street sewage. The idea being that all one would have to do to change water, add water, back flush the diatom, back flush the bio, Prime the diatom, Or add chems that need to be dissolved (IE calcium if this thing ever goes salt) is to simply turn a series of valves in a particular sequence…. IE no mess, no fuss… However seeing as this tank is NOT running yet it remains to be seen how effective this theory is, here are some pics of the pluming, once again this is a work in progress so that’s my excuse as to why things are still a bit ratty…
-walk
pps:
Thanks Sardesign!!! Maybe that would be a nice change in jobs, seeing as anything has got to pay better than what Im doing now!!!!!
lol how easy is it for a Canuck to get a job down there?!!
OK!!! So after some suggestions and a bit more research/experimentation these are my findings…..
1.
I asked a friend of mine who is an electrical engineer & electrician and he told me:
Running two GFIs in the same line will NOT cause anything funny to happen, it Is simply not necessary in most instances….
My logic for having 2:
Of all the equipment in the tank the lights are the most complex, there-for I reasoned there is a higher chance of them leaking power, etc… and tripping a GFI. By placing the lights on a separate GFI I was simply hoping to avoid this scenario: I leave home for a few days, the lights pop the GFI, all pumps heaters etc are also killed, and I have no fish when I get home… By adding a backup GFI in the line, if the lights were to pop the GFI the rest of the tank would remain operational, so its sort of a redundancy thing…
2.
I opened the box that houses my ballasts and was able to find the following when running things through both GFIs:
I can run the fans for an indefinite period of time with no inherent issues…
I can run the Right ballast with no inherent issues….
I can run the Left ballast with no inherent issues….
IF I run BOTH ballasts at the same time THEN I get the closest GFI tripping… Regardless if it is on a single or a dual GFI…
This leads me to the question and hopefully someone can tell me: what is the Power Factor (PF) for a PL-PAC- 400MH at startup, as well as all the way up until the bulbs are at temperature?
Or more specifically how many amps would 2 units pull at peak and contin? And before someone give me I=E/P remember this is single phase AC and im betting there are a few capacitors and resistors in these ballasts so I “think” I should be using I=P÷(E x PF)
BTW if there is an expert out there that is looking at this and shaking her/his head Please let me know,
So at this point Im thinking exactally what Galaxy said.... That the GFIs are tripping because the current pull as the ballasts are warming up is too great, Apparently a GFI WILL trip if feels an unsafe current draw… the GFIs I am using are rated for 15 Amps contin and 20 amps peak….
I did everything with 10Gauge cable and at the moment things are just on a 15 amp braker "Crosses fingures" HOWEVER the tank WILL be on a dedicated 30 amp line and a dedicted 20 amp line when I finally finish my renovations and managed to string new conduit to the room that its going in...
So I think Ill probabbly just have to either add a second timer, and stagger the start times, OR get a third GFI and run each light off of one, AND wire each one individually straight into the 30 AMP line...
Thanks guys!!!!!
-----------------------------------
Iv had a few PMs about the funny plumbing so here is a post on the topic:
All of those hoses btw are for running the pumps etc… I built things so I could plum the tank into street water and street sewage. The idea being that all one would have to do to change water, add water, back flush the diatom, back flush the bio, Prime the diatom, Or add chems that need to be dissolved (IE calcium if this thing ever goes salt) is to simply turn a series of valves in a particular sequence…. IE no mess, no fuss… However seeing as this tank is NOT running yet it remains to be seen how effective this theory is, here are some pics of the pluming, once again this is a work in progress so that’s my excuse as to why things are still a bit ratty…
-walk
pps:
Thanks Sardesign!!! Maybe that would be a nice change in jobs, seeing as anything has got to pay better than what Im doing now!!!!!
lol how easy is it for a Canuck to get a job down there?!!