Originally Posted by chipmaker
HOw does a knot in a cord cause a breaker to pop? I can see if a cord has a lot of amerage draw on it, and there may be a multitude of knots and tangles and it gets hot, but just a knot in a cord should not make a breaker pop. Its common practice to tie a knot in a cord for use as a strain relief.......its called a figure eight knot thats used, and odds are a lot of appliances without the plastic grommit type strain relievers will have a figure 8 knot tied in it. Some places call it an underwriters knot.
1st off, breakers dont pop, fuses pop, and breakers trip. Yes, if there is a lot af amperage drawn, it will trip the breaker do to the induced emectromagnetic field. But would you want to take the chance with the amount of money invested into the fishtank to come home, see the breaker tripped, and takemates dead??? I wouldnt....
Better safe than sorry....
Originally Posted by lepete
GCFI works like this:
You have black (hot) and white (neutral) wires coming to your pump. The current will come into your device via the hot wire. Normally, 100% of that incoming current will be leaving the device via the neutral wire. The GCFI will trip when less than 100% of the incoming is seen leaving the neutral wire.
Let say 1 amp comes into a pump, then 1 amp will leave the pump via the common wire. The GFCI will be fat and happy because incoming current (hot wire) equals to outgoing current (white wire).
However, while the magnetic impeller spins, it generate 1 V around the water. You then touch the water. There will be a current that go through your body. The GCFI will never see this current.
Grounding probe is never good idea. By adding a grounding probe, you are making a complete path and ver low resistance from the high voltage aquarium water to low voltage ground. Thus, creating a large current (Current = Voltage / Resistance).
How is the magnetic impeller creating voltage in the tank??? It needs some sort of magnetic field.......?
Originally Posted by jamesthero
i ran a cord to my bathroom to a gfi and it did not shut down i have three plugs in there and they all work, so i would have to say that the stray power going in the tank in not strong enough to trip the gfi
Is it the plug in type, or an acutal breaker??? the breaker type are the best... the plugs are known to malfunction