zmaxmotorsports
Well-known member
There are no dumb questions. Only house fires from questions not asked.
I like it!





There are no dumb questions. Only house fires from questions not asked.





Doesn't the fact that I disconnected the load lines confirm the GFCI is bad?
Some gfci's wont reset without power going to them,you could always stick a regular outlet in there as a temp to test the other outlets.
Just remember which wires were line and which ones were load when you put a new gfi back in there.![]()

Or wire nut together the two blacks and then the two whites. If that enables the downstream outlets to work, you definately had a bad GFCI. But first confirm that you have power coming in OK.
And as others have said, flip the breaker off before touching anything inside the box.
And maybe mark your 4 wires...incoming and outgoing...line and load... easy to get confused with all this excitement!![]()
That would work also,depends on whether he has wire nuts or an extra outlet on hand.

Ok. Tested with DMM again voltage on line and load side through the inlets is zero on both.
Next step is to bypass the GFCI by wiring together the downstream outlets and the panel correct?
I have a few wire nuts laying around.
Also noticed the light on the GFCI is out. Mean anything?
If you don't have voltage on the wires feeding the GFCI, then you have an issue between the GFCI and the breaker, IF the circuit is fed that way.
What else in the house doesn't work when you flip the breaker to that circuit off?
The light being off means the GFCI is in the tripped position or it's not getting incoming power.
I can't believe the voltage cops have corrected your title line with 110 in it yet.
Only thing beyond that is to ask if it's OK to use pvc for your airlines.
Did you get your generator back feed figure out? I hope you didn't lose power on the next storm. Good luck lots of great advice here.
Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk






Isn't the inside of the conduit dry?
So would it be acceptable here?
Silicone over geocell?
I like geocel BC it's clear
You need UF-B or what I would I just call Gray Romex....the underground rated stuff with the gray jacket.
You can use whatever sealer you want so long as it's rated to bond with whatever materials it will be sealing.
Hold up a second. If the wire goes from the inside of the house directly into the PB30 box or through conduit into the box why would I need outdoor wire? It is not exposed to the elements at all. It is totally sealed and dry
Ok. Tested with DMM again voltage on line and load side through the inlets is zero on both.
Next step is to bypass the GFCI by wiring together the downstream outlets and the panel correct?
I have a few wire nuts laying around.
Also noticed the light on the GFCI is out. Mean anything?
You are mistaken if you think the GFCI receptacle has one set of contact openings that are on the line side and the other on the load side. The contact openings on a duplex GRCI receptacle are both on the line side. Only those that are connected to the 'load' lugs by wired connections are on the load side and won't usually be in the same box. It is possible though, if you have a 2 gang box with 2 duplex receptacles. The second non GFCI could be on the load side.
That is not your situation from what I've read so far. What you have to do is shut off the power, all the power because you don't seem to have power to your GFCI. You can turn back on all known circuits but keep checking the GFCI just in case. Knowing that the GFCI circuit coming from the panel of other source, like an upstream outlet (which may be your problem).
Finally, i you find current between any black or colored wire in the GFCI box either to white or ground, label that. Then come back an tell us what's going on at that point.
Never trust any wire. You may find current on any wire and potential probably exists within your work area. That's one way of saying you could get shocked or electrocuted by the strangest of circumstances. So using your meter w/o touching ANY wire is the safest way to proceed.
Forget the plug in tester for now. It will show you a good outlet all the while that the connections for the next outlet are loose.
You have typical newbie questions and approaches to things. Electrical and lot of trades are funny that way.
They seem easy (just drill holes and runs wires right?) but the devil is in the details and you only learn these minute details with years in the trade or an extremely strong penchant with organization and planning with a code book in hand.
Many many years ago (I was in 7th grade, about 13 years old at the time), my dad and I ran a feed out to his new hot tub. The nm-b 10-3 wire (white jacket romex) left the breaker panel in the garage, went outside in conduit about 10 feet then went under the crawlspace, over to the hot tub and then back out in conduit under the deck and out to the tub.
This was fine and lasted a long time. When they did a remodel 15 years later we went to remove that cable and the jacket where it ran in conduit under the deck was deteriorated in spots I.E. swollen and brittle with mildew growing on it.
The portion at the breaker panel which was protected by the eve was in much better shape but still had mildew growing in the wire jacket. All the conduit was thoroughly glued and sealed at install. I know because I did it myself.
But yeah lesson learned.
I understand and fully admit that I am a newbie. I already have 10/3 NMb with ground and the wire will be totally indoors except where it exits the vinyl siding and goes into the PB 30 box. My wife won't even let me run a length of conduit (says it is ugly) so I have to fish the wire down from the drop ceiling (inside) and out into the box. So, at maximum, 3 inches of wire will be "outside". I can't possibly imagine that outdoor wire is needed for this BICBW
What do some others say?
I understand and fully admit that I am a newbie. I already have 10/3 NMb with ground and the wire will be totally indoors except where it exits the vinyl siding and goes into the PB 30 box. My wife won't even let me run a length of conduit (says it is ugly) so I have to fish the wire down from the drop ceiling (inside) and out into the box. So, at maximum, 3 inches of wire will be "outside". I can't possibly imagine that outdoor wire is needed for this BICBW
What do some others say?
Okay I am following to an extent.
Are you suggesting that I check the wiring on each of the 4 outlets with the power off?
Then, one by one, secure them, flip back on the power and check the GFCI again?
What about checking all the outlets with the plug in tester?
I understand and fully admit that I am a newbie. I already have 10/3 NMb with ground and the wire will be totally indoors except where it exits the vinyl siding and goes into the PB 30 box. My wife won't even let me run a length of conduit (says it is ugly) so I have to fish the wire down from the drop ceiling (inside) and out into the box. So, at maximum, 3 inches of wire will be "outside". I can't possibly imagine that outdoor wire is needed for this BICBW
What do some others say?
Okay I am following to an extent.
Are you suggesting that I check the wiring on each of the 4 outlets with the power off?
Then, one by one, secure them, flip back on the power and check the GFCI again?
What about checking all the outlets with the plug in tester?
So lets recap here:
1) You don't have power at the GFCI outlet correct?
2) You know that the GFCI outlet is in the same circuit as the outdoor outlets and BEFORE them in the circuit correct?
Based on these two facts, just ignore the outside stuff. Pretend it doesn't exist.
You need to figure out why you aren't getting power the GFCI.
So, do this:
Figure what's in the circuit before GFCI. Make and draw a crude map of your house and the circuit and work your way backwards towards the breaker panel. This simply involves removing each item in the circuit and checking the wires for voltage. Check between the hot and neutral and the hot and ground in each device.
Report back.
OK. I think I am getting this thread a bit mixed up and ahead of myself. I really do appreciate all the advice and everyone has been super helpful. I have also learned alot in the past few days.
For the generator issue, I think I have a good solution. I am going to fish the wire down the wall from the drop ceiling and attach the PB30 directly to the vinyl siding, caulk it and run through a stub of conduit inside the wall probably. Hopefully this solves the wire issue.
As for the GFCI, I am going to get the tester today. I will make a crude map with the testing results drawn on it and report back. We can go from there.
Thanks again.
question. What do you guys use to seal the hole cut for the conduit? I am thinking geocell 2300
It would probably be fine.
Think of it this way.
Code looks at wire in conduit the same way as it would look at the wire without conduit. If the conduit goes outside, the wire in the conduit needs to be rated for outdoor exposure.
FYI, conduit fills with water from condensation. It doesn't matter if water hits it or not.
I understand and fully admit that I am a newbie. I already have 10/3 NMb with ground and the wire will be totally indoors except where it exits the vinyl siding and goes into the PB 30 box. My wife won't even let me run a length of conduit (says it is ugly) so I have to fish the wire down from the drop ceiling (inside) and out into the box. So, at maximum, 3 inches of wire will be "outside". I can't possibly imagine that outdoor wire is needed for this BICBW
What do some others say?
So lets recap here:
1) You don't have power at the GFCI outlet correct?
2) You know that the GFCI outlet is in the same circuit as the outdoor outlets and BEFORE them in the circuit correct?
Based on these two facts, just ignore the outside stuff. Pretend it doesn't exist.
You need to figure out why you aren't getting power the GFCI.
So, do this:
Figure what's in the circuit before GFCI. Make and draw a crude map of your house and the circuit and work your way backwards towards the breaker panel. This simply involves removing each item in the circuit and checking the wires for voltage. Check between the hot and neutral and the hot and ground in each device.
Report back.
With 3" of wire I wouldnt worry too much,no differant than wire ran to an ac disconnect in my book.
You are talking about the 3" of wire going directly from the wall into the back of the box right?
Dont run the wire exposed with no physical protection.
+1 on this. As long as the NM cable is going directly into the receptacle box that bolts onto the house your fine. That box is approved for outdoor use.
Looks good!
