Why doesn't a 20A GFI receptacle have a 20A plug with one blade turned sideways? I get that the 20A is feed through, so when I group, say, 3 more regular 15A receptacles downstream...all GFI protected...along the kitchen counter I can interrupt 20A total current from all 4 15A receptacles together. Reduces bogus trips? But, a couple of questions come to mind; Do I breaker it at 20A? Seems like I would. Run the whole circuit in 12 AWG? Except the last run from receptacle 3 to 4 in 14 AWG if I was feeling cheap? Since these are all 15A plugs, if somebody had a 20A blender (if such a thing exists) it would have a 20A plug on it and I couldn't plug it in anyway. But, if I had a regular blender that was supposed to pull 3A go defective and want to draw 19A, would I be pulling more than the rated current through a receptacle waiting for a 20A breaker to never break?
When I stick a string of 4 receptacles along the wall in my garage, I don't worry about any of this. 15A breaker, 14 AWG, daisy chain 4 receptacles together..done.
When I stick a string of 4 receptacles along the wall in my garage, I don't worry about any of this. 15A breaker, 14 AWG, daisy chain 4 receptacles together..done.




