HELP heater exploded!

TheDuude

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Need some advice my heater a hyger 600 watt exploded in my reef tank.

Loud bang and sparks in the tank, immediately unplugged the heater and pulled out the tube. The glass tube had completely separated from the cord and everything that was inside the heater blew out all over my reef tank.

I immediately started siphoning the debris through a 1 micron sock and spent 2 hours getting every last shard I could see out of the tank. Tank is barebottom so that was easy. There was some type of white sand and shiny metal flakes all over the tank.

Water is now clear, fish acting ok so far. I have a large bag of carbon running and am mixing water now to do a 50% water change.

Is my tank going to survive and what else can I do?

Thanks
 

maroun.c

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Large water change and running some carbon would also help
 

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TheDuude

TheDuude

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After thinking about this for a bit, I’d guess that the level of explosive carnage you’re describing is from a steam explosion!
Makes sense.. pressure buildup inside. It sounded like a gunshot going off. I was in backyard at the time and heard it from ok outside the house.

I see no other debris vacuumed then all out and running carbon. What else should I be doing?
 

UncommonSense

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Makes sense.. pressure buildup inside. It sounded like a gunshot going off. I was in backyard at the time and heard it from ok outside the house.

I see no other debris vacuumed then all out and running carbon. What else should I be doing?
You’re lucky you were home!

The white sand is likely silica based…

the big threats would be the metal from the heating elements themselves, and the copper conductors attached to them!

Carbon plus a sizable water change should suffice, primarily because sure you caught it quickly!
 
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TheDuude

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Well thanks all for the responses. I confirmed the material in the heater was mica. 50% water change, heavy carbon, and some cuprisorb has the tank back to clear and so far everything seems ok.
 

BeanAnimal

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I would never run a heater with the head or cord entrance submerged. The only thing that I would use are heaters with full "test tube" type envelopes with the head out of the water. Never glass or titanium tubes with plugged or capped ends.

Thermal expansion and contraction and/or materials degradation will eventually allow water in.
 
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TheDuude

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I would never run a heater with the head or cord entrance submerged. The only thing that I would use are heaters with full "test tube" type envelopes with the head out of the water. Never glass or titanium tubes with plugged or capped ends.

Thermal expansion and contraction and/or materials degradation will eventually allow water in.
Can you elaborate what you mean by the teat tube style? I have ordered a titanium heater and am curious what type I have
 

BeanAnimal

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There is no opening at one end, like a test tube. It can't leak there because it is not open there.
1778697907690.png

1778697728204.png

1778698037331.png




VS an open tube plugged at both ends
1778697810139.png

1778697840281.png


Sadly much of the crap all comes from the same place now under different brands, so maybe your options are limited
 
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TheDuude

TheDuude

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There is no opening at one end, like a test tube. It can't leak there because it is not open there.
1778697907690.png

1778697728204.png

1778698037331.png




VS an open tube plugged at both ends
1778697810139.png

1778697840281.png


Sadly much of the crap all comes from the same place now under different brands, so maybe your options are limited
Ah makes sense, cap above water line and your removing the potential for water intrusion. I like it!

Thanks
 
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TheDuude

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Your course of action was good.

Have you inspected where the heater was for possible other glass damage .... I'd be concerned with an explosion you could hear in the backyard.
I have and nothing to be found
 

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