Light And Fan Downtream Won't Tirp
I currently have a shower light and fan wired downstream from a GFCI receptacle. I am pretty sure they are wired into the load side of the GFCI. I will make sure again after work today. My problem right now is the light and fan does not trip when the TEST button is pushed. Only the receptacle will trip.
What did I do wrong? Similar Tutorials
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I have a home that I only use from time to time. At Christmas one of the GFCI outlets kept tripping. This outlet has a TV/reciever/cable box/xbox/lights, etc. on the load side. When I reset it, everything would be OK for 20 minutes or so, then it would trip. I did not have time to investigate the problem so I just left it. When I returned a week or so ago, the outlet was tripped and would not reset. As soon as I pushed the reset button in, it would pop back out. I replace the GFCI outlet but that did not help. I removed all load outlets and inspected them. Everything looked OK. Anyone have an idea. The strange thing to me is that the problem seemed to get worse over time. (I.e. it stayed reset for 30 minutes at Christmas and now it will not reset at all). Ideas? Thanks in advance.
Hi all, this is my first post, so...my kitchen was just renovated and the electrical outlets are on the walls and I wanted them in plugmold under the cabinet. Why didn't it happen? Long story, but I'm doing it myself now. The electrical receptacles are on 2 separate circuits with a gfci receptacle on each and neither circuit has a receptacle outside the kitchen where I can put the gfci's, so I'm putting gfci breakers in the panel instead. I've run into a different problem on each circuit that'd like some advice on.
Circuit 1: this is a 20 amp circuit. I have to plug this circuit's neutral wire into the gfci breaker, but I couldn't see which neutral wire matched the hot wire (buried in mess of wires) and I don't have a continuity tester so I just pulled one neutral at a time (tedious) until the circuit failed, but it never failed. So I did this again for every neutral...same result. This circuit shares a few boxes with other circuits so I'm wondering if the neutrals on different circuits are tied together somewhere, and if so I'm pretty sure, but not completely, that that's not going to work with the gfci breaker. So I didn't install that gfci breaker since I'm not confident it would actually gfci (yep i verbified gfci). What do you think? Circuit 2: this is a 20 amp circuit. This circuit currently has the refrigerator, gas stove and range hood, and then a gfci in front of 3 electrical receptacles, which already sounds bad since I thought the kitchen receptacles required 2 dedicated circuits. I replaced that breaker with no problem, but it tripped after a few minutes and continued to trip every few minutes. I haven't changed anything else on that circuit yet and it's never tripped before, but now it is, so I put the old breaker back for now. The current gfci receptacle is only protecting the 3 outlets since the appliances are ahead of it. I know you wouldn't normally want the appliances gfci protected, so do you think the refrigerator motor may be a problem? Do I need the appliances on a separate circuit? What would you suggest I do? Thanks, and if you're wondering "why all the effort?", it's partly because I'm meddlesome, partly because I'm bored, and partly because the backsplash tile is to be on showcase, not the electrical receptacles.
Hello!
In a house I recently bought I have a strange situation. There is a three way switch on one side of the wall with two sets of wires coming in: Red, Black, White Black, White and then one stray Black that goes to the duplex receptacle on the other side of the wall (on the OUTSIDE of the wall! Clearly an afterthought.) Into the receptacle goes this strange black single wire from the light switch and the usual black and white wires + ground wire. I went to change the ugly receptacle to a decora and now it doesn't work, though I'm not 100% sure it worked before. I've wired the new receptacle as I remember it being wired before, any idea what is wrong? I've attached a diagram! Thanks in advance for any input.
A word of thanks and a followup on my question.
I had to try three GFCI recepticles before I got one that wouldn't trip! More then likely these two that would trip must have been more sensitive and may work in a different circuit. Interestingly, changing the outlet was the first thing I did. Didn't think two would do the same thing. Another experience I can add to my notebook.
I have this cirucit with a GFCI outlet, then two regular outlets off the load. None of them work. The GFCI reset button was out, push it in, it pops back out.
I replaced the GFCI with a new one and it seems to be fine. (GFCI outlet and load outlets are working). Is this common? (I mean that a GFCI would go bad, and display this for behavior?) Thank you, and if this is a stupid question, you may electronically "dope slap" me!
Can an outside receptacle be protected by a GFCI on the inside of my garage or must the recep. outside be a GFCI aslo?
what the fudge sticks man?
I am not a DIY'er or a handy man but I gave it a shot.. I replaced an old a$$ receptacle with a brand new one and I wired it EXACTLY the same as the old one.. I know this because I did it WIRE BY WIRE!! i.e. I took 1 wire off the old receptacle and installed it on the new one.. wire by wire.. Power works and all that.. BUT NOW the ONLY light switch in the room does not control the bottom receptacle anymore? what gives? i don't get it.. what changed? Previously the light switch gave power to this outlets bottom plug, so I had the lamp plugged into it and turned it on/off with the light switch.. but that doesn't work? I even triple checked my work and still not seeing whats up? any ideas? oNe. p.s. HOW do you release the wires on these new fangled outlets? It says push spring in slot to release but I am not seeing it? any ideas?
If you have a 20 amp circuit going to your bathroom vanity, can you have two 20 amp receptacles on it, one a GFI receptacle and the other a standard 20 amp receptacle wired to the load terminals of the GFI receptacle ?
Or does the code require each receptacle to be a GFI on its own circuit ? Arky
Is there any limitation as to how many receptacles can be protected by one GFCI receptacle? For example, can I start the circuit with a GFCI and have another 8 receptacles downstream from it?
I'm buying a 12 lead Stamford generator, engine driven, and have a question or two about over current protection and ground fault protection. I will normally have it wired for single phase 120 and 240 in the double delta configuration. I may occasionally rewire it for 3 phase 240 in the series delta configuration.
For the single phase setup, what I've read so far leads me to believe I should have a main circuit breaker of about 125% continuous ampacity; it's a 10 kw generator. Is that correct? What kind of breaker do I need? Should this main be a GFCI? Do I bond neutral and ground? This is a portable unit so I need to package a load center on the generator frame. Can I wire one 240 receptacle directly to the main and two or three 120 volt GFCI's on it as well? Or do I need another 240 breaker downstream of the main? What should I be thinking about for swithching back and forth between single phase and three phase? Alot of questions, trying to get smart and be safe. Thanks. |