Since the 500W aquarium heating couldn't get my 100 gal fish tank (+50 gal sump, 50 flood & drain and 16 ft NFT) higher than about 71F, I built DIY heater using 2000W electric water heater element and a Eaton thermostat for a hot tub, which came with no setting indications for even OFF/ON.
I figured that I could use my multimeter to determine OFF/ON, as well as amount of voltage being used to regulate the heat level of the element, but what I discovered is completely counter-intuitive. When I check the Voltage in what I think is the OFF position (the element is cold) I see 115-120V. When I go to what I suppose is the full ON position, I see zero volts. It remains at zero volts nearly all the way back to the OFF position, only showing 115 volts in the last 15-20 degrees of arch. This is not at all what I expected.
Anyone here in the Community an electrician and familiar with how this type of thermostat works? BTW... I have the 48" temperature sensor submerged in the tank.
Thanks.
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I have not been able to find a manual online for that temp controller. I have seen that its good for 25A (2kW @ 120V will be 17A so you're good there). It does appear to be an On/Off control type.
From your photo and posts afterwards...
IF this is correct... the measurements...
You're now measuring the voltage across the heater - when the heater will is on, your multimeter will read 120Vac
Years ago I invented "Moore's Second Law." The first law, of course has to do with computer processing power. Gordon Moore (no relation) created that one. The second, my law, goes like this: If there is a 50/50 chance to do something either right or wrong -- like which wire to connect to the thermostat -- there's a 90% probably of picking the wrong one -- in this case the black.
Just to reassure everyone. The circuit is a GFCI and installed by a professional electrician who helped me set up the wiring for the system, including upgrading the necessary breakers for my 400W 230V metal halide lights. The only question is how am I going to ground the element (green wire). I think I'll have him come back over and help with this. Want to get it right and in code. That's what this whole adventure has been about: learning, experiencing.
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