OP
wyliesdiesels
Well-known member
a GFCI is not an OCPD so that is just a coincidence.it tripped the kitchen GFCI
a GFCI is not an OCPD so that is just a coincidence.it tripped the kitchen GFCI
theres an edit buttonPlease ignore I screwed up.
why? all you have to do is put a regular receptacle where the GFCI is and then put the GFCI in the outside location. no tearing out numerous walls required.It would require tearing out numerous walls to rewire this place.
a GFCI is not an OCPD so that is just a coincidence.
I removed the text to add my comment.theres an edit button
Not to mention that modern refrigerators and freezers don't use squat for power so a dedicated circuit is nowhere near a necessity, especially when that dedicated circuit would have to have an AFCI to pass an inspection. My fridge probably isn't even considered modern since it's seven years old. LG french door with the pull out freezer and it uses less than four amps. I don't know the cubic footage of my upright freezer, but it's 6'4" tall and uses 1.8 amps, I think it's three, no more than four years old. They are pieces of **** and won't last as long as the old Kenmores of the 70's and 80's, but at least they're cheap to run...if the fridge or freezer is in a room or location where GFCIs are required, installing a single receptacle on a dedicated circuit will not exempt from that code requirement.
Got to agree. Korean built appliance don't seem to last and get repair parts TAKES FOREVER !LG french door with the pull out freezer and it uses less than four amps. I don't know the cubic footage of my upright freezer, but it's 6'4" tall and uses 1.8 amps, I think it's three, no more than four years old. They are pieces of **** and won't last as long as the old Kenmores of the 70's and 80's, but at least they're cheap to run...
why? all you have to do is put a regular receptacle where the GFCI is and then put the GFCI in the outside location. no tearing out numerous walls required.
Got to agree. Korean built appliance don't seem to last and getting repair parts TAKES FOREVER !
Did they exclude AFCI altogether? Last I knew, Indiana was on the 2008 which required AFCI at least for bedroom circuits, I'm not sure if it had expanded to other rooms by then. If they took AFCI completely out, good for them. Iowa excluded GFCI for residential 240 volt receptacles and AC's.I am so glad Indiana saw thru the sham and is one of the only states that doesn’t require arc fault breakers.
Now if they would just outlaw the main reason for them in the first place, back stab devices
Did they exclude AFCI altogether? Last I knew, Indiana was on the 2008 which required AFCI at least for bedroom circuits, I'm not sure if it had expanded to other rooms by then. If they took AFCI completely out, good for them. Iowa excluded GFCI for residential 240 volt receptacles and AC's.

Probably providing a link is the best way to provide that info. One has a choice of which version of the code they follow but they can’t pick or chose, it’s one or the other.Did they exclude AFCI altogether? Last I knew, Indiana was on the 2008 which required AFCI at least for bedroom circuits, I'm not sure if it had expanded to other rooms by then. If they took AFCI completely out, good for them. Iowa excluded GFCI for residential 240 volt receptacles and AC's.
I didnt say anything about a GFCI breaker.This house looks like it was wired by a monkey coming off a multiweek bender of crack and booze. Unfortunately, there are recepticles downstream of the GFCI's that are required to be protected as well. Don't really want to convert to GFCI breakers , as we are planning on getting out of this house next year.
Probably providing a link is the best way to provide that info. One has a choice of which version of the code they follow but they can’t pick or chose, it’s one or the other.
I'd install GFI on all kitchens, bathrooms, basements, garages, and outside for 15 and 20, 120V outlets only.If you were building a new house for your family in a rural area with no rules,inspections or even inspectors save for plumbing...what would you install because of or in spite of the NEC?
I wanted to sell & move out of CA, & was looking at Northern Arkansas, the county only has septic inspections & I don't like how they wire things there, and i asked the same question at a electrical forum, but I would not install AFCI's, nor would I have GFCI's on the clothes dryer or electric range, either, I would love to have a house done in EMT too but that is a bit much.This is a great discussion.Let me propose this question to all you licenses electricians here. If you were building a new house for your family in a rural area with no rules,inspections or even inspectors save for plumbing...what would you install because of or in spite of the NEC? C'mon guys ...speak up.
I've been in a similar situation, I built a house in 2006, the state didn't invade small towns with the code until 2007. I would do everything the same as I did then: GFCI on each side of the kitchen sink, bathrooms, and outside receptacles. The end.
This is a great discussion.Let me propose this question to all you licenses electricians here. If you were building a new house for your family in a rural area with no rules,inspections or even inspectors save for plumbing...what would you install because of or in spite of the NEC? C'mon guys ...speak up.
My house was done by an industrial electrician.How many of you professional electricians are going to wire your new house in a code and inspection free zone with all the stuff you have stashed in your shed and garage that's left over from jobs done in the past? Ya got that 500' roll of #12 thhn, sure it's purple but the electrons don't know....![]()
purple would not be a code violation for the ungrounded conductorYa got that 500' roll of #12 thhn, sure it's purple but the electrons don't know....
The only colors that are prohibited are green, white, and graypurple would not be a code violation for the ungrounded conductor
Does not sound that hard, install multiple GFCI outlets in the locations where GFCI is needed and feed the next device from the line terminals and connect nothing to the load terminals.Wish I could, but it feeds the outside receptacle by the kitchen door. Wiring in this house is strange....The GFCI for the kitchen sink outlets also feed the outside one by the front door. The one for the small bathroom feeds the one inside by the kitchen door....![]()
100% correct. What I was trying to say (and aparently failing) is that NEC does not say "refrigerator must be on GFCI because it's in a kitchen."if the fridge or freezer is in a room or location where GFCIs are required, installing a single receptacle on a dedicated circuit will not exempt from that code requirement.
What's wrong with purple?How many of you professional electricians are going to wire your new house in a code and inspection free zone with all the stuff you have stashed in your shed and garage that's left over from jobs done in the past? Ya got that 500' roll of #12 thhn, sure it's purple but the electrons don't know....![]()
Nothing, I read somewhere purple is the new orange.What's wrong with purple?
Understand the BOY, Brown, Orange, Yellow for 480V is not allowed in San Fransisco, Brown, Purple, Yellow, is required, because orange is required for the high leg on 240V delta.Nothing, I read somewhere purple is the new orange.
I looked up the SF Electrical Code.Understand the BOY, Brown, Orange, Yellow for 480V is not allowed in San Fransisco, Brown, Purple, Yellow, is required, because orange is required for the high leg on 240V delta.
Seems like common sense is what is not allowed in SFUnderstand the BOY, Brown, Orange, Yellow for 480V is not allowed in San Fransisco, Brown, Purple, Yellow, is required, because orange is required for the high leg on 240V delta.
Load isn't what "trips" a GFCI...Have two random breaker trippers at my place.
One is a GFCI outlet in the shop bathroom. Bathroom has a dedicated electric tankless water heater. Ocasionally when turning on the hot water the outlet will trip w/o load on it. With any load, even a simple night light, it has never tripped. WH is 240V dedicated circuit, gfci is dedicated single outlet, both home run to the panel box less than 10'.
Second one just recently started happening. Son built me a gaming PC, all new components. After couple hours of run time, it has tripped my AF/GFCI breakers (squareD QO) multiple times now. Moved the tower to a different circuit and that AF/GFCI breaker eventually tripped too. We have run the same gaming setup at his house the whole weekend with higher loads and not tripped his standard breakers.
Every ground and neutral has its own termination point, nothing double up on the bars.
Understand, it's the GFCI that trips and not the breaker.Load isn't what "trips" a GFCI...
Is the breaker tripped, or is the GFCI?
Adding something as low as a 5w nightlight to a 1500w space heater keeps it from tripping. The GFCI has only, EVER, tripped with no load when the water heater turns on.
since they are separate circuits and the WH is not on the load side of the GFCI, it would be impossible for the WH to trip the GFCI. That defies logic.Have two random breaker trippers at my place.
One is a GFCI outlet in the shop bathroom. Bathroom has a dedicated electric tankless water heater. Occasionally when turning on the hot water the outlet will trip w/o load on it. With any load, even a simple night light, it has never tripped. WH is 240V dedicated circuit, gfci is dedicated single outlet, both home run to the panel box less than 10'.
probably an issue with the AFCI. i would get rid of it.Second one just recently started happening. Son built me a gaming PC, all new components. After couple hours of run time, it has tripped my AF/GFCI breakers (squareD QO) multiple times now. Moved the tower to a different circuit and that AF/GFCI breaker eventually tripped too. We have run the same gaming setup at his house the whole weekend with higher loads and not tripped his standard breakers.
Every ground and neutral has its own termination point, nothing double up on the bars.
that is impossible. the WH is not on the load side of the GFCI. The GFCI does not care what is going on on the line side....Understand, it's the GFCI that trips and not the breaker.
My guess, it's from the PWM water heater causing the GFCI to see a variation in the ground/neutral. I definitely don't have sensitive enough graphing meters to prove this.
Adding something as low as a 5w nightlight to a 1500w space heater keeps it from tripping. The GFCI has only, EVER, tripped with no load when the water heater turns on.