ssdave
Banned
I'm wiring a new house. Have an arc fault circuit that holds until ANY load is put on it, anywhere in the circuit. It then instantly trips. It will hold indefinitely without a load on the circuit.
I split the circuit, then split it at the first receptacle trying to isolate the problem. Same results. Initially, the problem started when I put on a CFL ceiling light and turned on the circuit to test. It held, until I turned on the light. I presumed it was the light, and changed to LED. Still the same problem. If I use an extension cord to the light switch to power the light, the light doesn't trip that other circuit arc fault breaker. So, then, I started in testing the receptacles on the circuit and found that any load, anywhere in the circuit, trips the AFCI. I had tested the circuit in my normal manner, prior to the light, by testing the last leg of the circuit for resistance between load, neutral, and ground and then by turning on the breaker and testing each receptacle with my standard plug in tester to verify correct polarity and ground continuity.
The circuit shows infinite resistance load to neutral, load to ground, any point in the circuit that I've tried. Zero resistance ground to neutral. Test instrument is a known good Fluke clone that I've used for nearly 20 years.
Is there any logical way to test an AFCI, other than to switch it out with another known good one?
The device is a QO square D 20 amp.
I split the circuit, then split it at the first receptacle trying to isolate the problem. Same results. Initially, the problem started when I put on a CFL ceiling light and turned on the circuit to test. It held, until I turned on the light. I presumed it was the light, and changed to LED. Still the same problem. If I use an extension cord to the light switch to power the light, the light doesn't trip that other circuit arc fault breaker. So, then, I started in testing the receptacles on the circuit and found that any load, anywhere in the circuit, trips the AFCI. I had tested the circuit in my normal manner, prior to the light, by testing the last leg of the circuit for resistance between load, neutral, and ground and then by turning on the breaker and testing each receptacle with my standard plug in tester to verify correct polarity and ground continuity.
The circuit shows infinite resistance load to neutral, load to ground, any point in the circuit that I've tried. Zero resistance ground to neutral. Test instrument is a known good Fluke clone that I've used for nearly 20 years.
Is there any logical way to test an AFCI, other than to switch it out with another known good one?
The device is a QO square D 20 amp.
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