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chrisritson

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i just stuck my hand in my 125 gal tank to find a very minute electric current in the water! i had checked it last night, and it was fine. It now is the following day aproximatly 18 hours later. there is a large octopus in this tank who i am very found of, and him as well as all of the inhabitance seem to be alive and well.
i imediatly traced the charge to a powerhead and removed it. it is one of the generic ones with a cartoon fish along the side and the word beauty on it. It pumps about 800 gal/hr. is there any way to fix this pump, and most importantly are the residants in the tank at a large risk? if so what can be done now? thank you very much.
 

danmhippo

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Get rid of the old pump, its not worth it to attempt to fix it.

Get a new pump and install a titanium grounding probe as a precaution.
 

davelin315

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yup. I agree. Fixing a pump that is leaking electricity would probably require rewiring the pump and then resealing the housing with an epoxy resin that would waterproof the entire pump (kind of like waterproofing a basement foundation).
 

JohnD

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I agree with Dave and Dan.

Another idea you should consider are GFI outlets. You wouldn't want to be seriously electrocuted, would you? Think of this time as a warning.
icon_eek.gif
 

bowfront

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One more vcte for trashing the pump and adding a GFI outlet and titanium ground if you don't already have these.
 

nm

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Scrap it!!! I have had this problem many times I've only been able to fix one. Where the cord was entering the powerhead, water was also entering. I cleaned where the cord entered and use silicone to seal it.
A better idea is, do not completely submerge your powerhead most of them if not all have a water line.(do not submerge pass manufacturers mark--same as with submergable heaters)
 
A

Anonymous

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It's $18 to replace a powerhead. We're talking about probable deaths in your tank not to mention a good chance of killing yourself.

Spend the $18.
 

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