akpolaris
Well-known member
I have a circuit for my residential exterior lighting that is GFCI protected. All the boxes are inside and not exposed to weather. 3 exterior lights on the residence with boxes inside the t1-11 siding. 3 unheated outbuildings with a couple of exterior lights and interior lights in each. Switches are inside the sheds. Recently the GFCI in the house popped and I replaced it assuming that it was just failing, aged. now the new breaker is popping quite intermittently and a few days later it will function fine again. I have checked the boxes and the connections seem secure. After talking with an electrician he suggested that the boxes may be getting condensation which is melting / dripping in the box. He suggested using duct seal on the face of the boxes and replacing the plates. Sound idea?? The entire box is in unheated spaces so I am not sure how sealing the faceplate is a solution. This circuit has been functioning with no problem for 8 or 10 years until recently. I haven't tracked the failures against the changing weather. I am in a temperate part of Alaska so we do have some temps that fluctuate and plenty of rain and snow.
