There was an article in TFH some years ago that concluded that you get a capacitance effect in a tank. The coils in the pumps being the plates etc.
Their conclusion was that current only starts to flow once you ground the tank, and of course, you have to ground the tank to see if current is flowing and so noting that your meter shows a potential difference between the tank and ground proves very little.
The only good reason for a grouning probe is to prove an immediate ground fault for a GFI. This gives your organisms a chance of survival by turning off the power as soon as a fault occurs. When you stick your hand in the tank the GFI would probably trip anyway - the difference will be that your fish and corals will be long dead if you wait for that to happen.
You should have probes in each discrete section of water e.g. in the tank, the sump, and anywhere else where there's powered items. It's not good enough to just have a probe in the sump if you have things like powerheads in the tank since, if the return pump fails there may not be a relaible electrical connection between the tank and the sump e.g. no column of water connecting the two.
To be killed, or to lose a tank full of organisms, for the sake of an almost free accessory is just plain stupidity.
Their conclusion was that current only starts to flow once you ground the tank, and of course, you have to ground the tank to see if current is flowing and so noting that your meter shows a potential difference between the tank and ground proves very little.
The only good reason for a grouning probe is to prove an immediate ground fault for a GFI. This gives your organisms a chance of survival by turning off the power as soon as a fault occurs. When you stick your hand in the tank the GFI would probably trip anyway - the difference will be that your fish and corals will be long dead if you wait for that to happen.
You should have probes in each discrete section of water e.g. in the tank, the sump, and anywhere else where there's powered items. It's not good enough to just have a probe in the sump if you have things like powerheads in the tank since, if the return pump fails there may not be a relaible electrical connection between the tank and the sump e.g. no column of water connecting the two.
To be killed, or to lose a tank full of organisms, for the sake of an almost free accessory is just plain stupidity.