I never thought a grounding probe would be such an important piece of equipment until this weekend. This weekend I learned a valuable lesson and hopefully others can learn from it.
Several weeks ago, I got a 5-6" regal angel. He had been eating beautifully. Two Hikari Mega-Marine Angel cubes daily. Bloodworms, blackworms, brine, etc. He has been in a hypo QT doing very well. About a week ago, I noticed he would shake a bit every so often. Didn't think anything of it. My Copperband who is houses with him, also started doing it. Very odd. I figured it was just two delicate fish with strange behavior.
On Friday night, 30 days of 1.009 SG had passed. I started to raise the salinity. Went from 1.009 to 1.011 over the course of 2 hours. I woke up on Saturday to see my CBB gilling rapidly, obviously under a lot of stress. He wouldn't come out to greet me like he normally does. The regal was laying on his side, gilling very rapidly. Something was obviously wrong. I thought maybe the salinity, but no other fish in there had problems adjusting to the salt (not even the guppies which I found had delivered that night as I saw a ton of babies around). I thought, well maybe these two are just so delicate that they can't even take a .002 change in SG. Wait, that can't be right....that would make them almost impossible to ship. I stuck my hand in to try to prod the regal a bit and lo and behold, got a nice little tingle in my hand. I hit me right away that something has been leaking voltage back into the system and had been for quite some time. These two fish, being bigger must be affected more. Increasing the salinity must have made it more stressful as now the water was much more conductive.
Now all my circuits are on GFCI. I wondered why it didn't trip. The GFCI was obviously working but not well enough. I started unplugging powerheads. As soon as I unplugged the heater, the regal snapped right up and started swimming regularly. However, it was not to be. He swam regularly for a few more hours but then he wouldn't get up anymore. I transferred him into a bucket but I knew he was on his deathbed. The damage had been done.
I don't know what long term effects might there be on my CBB now. I'm slowly increasing the SG now without the heater obviously. He's not at all happy. Ignored his usualy live blackworms and is hiding out instead of coming to greet me. I guess I'll be looking at titanium grounding probes in the near future and investing in better heaters.
I hope my story will help others in not making the same mistake I did. I'm quite sad that of all the fish in that tank, it was the regal that went.
Several weeks ago, I got a 5-6" regal angel. He had been eating beautifully. Two Hikari Mega-Marine Angel cubes daily. Bloodworms, blackworms, brine, etc. He has been in a hypo QT doing very well. About a week ago, I noticed he would shake a bit every so often. Didn't think anything of it. My Copperband who is houses with him, also started doing it. Very odd. I figured it was just two delicate fish with strange behavior.
On Friday night, 30 days of 1.009 SG had passed. I started to raise the salinity. Went from 1.009 to 1.011 over the course of 2 hours. I woke up on Saturday to see my CBB gilling rapidly, obviously under a lot of stress. He wouldn't come out to greet me like he normally does. The regal was laying on his side, gilling very rapidly. Something was obviously wrong. I thought maybe the salinity, but no other fish in there had problems adjusting to the salt (not even the guppies which I found had delivered that night as I saw a ton of babies around). I thought, well maybe these two are just so delicate that they can't even take a .002 change in SG. Wait, that can't be right....that would make them almost impossible to ship. I stuck my hand in to try to prod the regal a bit and lo and behold, got a nice little tingle in my hand. I hit me right away that something has been leaking voltage back into the system and had been for quite some time. These two fish, being bigger must be affected more. Increasing the salinity must have made it more stressful as now the water was much more conductive.
Now all my circuits are on GFCI. I wondered why it didn't trip. The GFCI was obviously working but not well enough. I started unplugging powerheads. As soon as I unplugged the heater, the regal snapped right up and started swimming regularly. However, it was not to be. He swam regularly for a few more hours but then he wouldn't get up anymore. I transferred him into a bucket but I knew he was on his deathbed. The damage had been done.
I don't know what long term effects might there be on my CBB now. I'm slowly increasing the SG now without the heater obviously. He's not at all happy. Ignored his usualy live blackworms and is hiding out instead of coming to greet me. I guess I'll be looking at titanium grounding probes in the near future and investing in better heaters.
I hope my story will help others in not making the same mistake I did. I'm quite sad that of all the fish in that tank, it was the regal that went.