I just moved into a shop with really scary and hazardous wiring from the previous occupant. After ripping all that off the walls, I'm left with two outlets in the entire place that work. Both are hooked to the same 20A circuit, the power conduit runs down from the ceiling into a junction box, where it "T's" off into two outlets about 10' from the middle.
As far as I can tell I've got hot/neutral/gnd coming from the ceiling in the junction box. Then, the hot/neutral/gnd split up and go to each outlet.
Anyway, I installed a GFCI outlet in both sides, because the old outlets were **** and I had some nice new 20A GFCI outlets already. When I turned the power back on, one GFCI worked, but the other didn't. It shows 120v between ground and neutral. WTF? I didn't have a lot of time to try and trace the wires but everything seems right.
Is it a problem trying to install two GFCIs on one circuit like this? I guess the more correct way to do it would be to add a GFCI outlet at the junction box, and then two regular outlets on both ends.
As far as I can tell I've got hot/neutral/gnd coming from the ceiling in the junction box. Then, the hot/neutral/gnd split up and go to each outlet.
Anyway, I installed a GFCI outlet in both sides, because the old outlets were **** and I had some nice new 20A GFCI outlets already. When I turned the power back on, one GFCI worked, but the other didn't. It shows 120v between ground and neutral. WTF? I didn't have a lot of time to try and trace the wires but everything seems right.
Is it a problem trying to install two GFCIs on one circuit like this? I guess the more correct way to do it would be to add a GFCI outlet at the junction box, and then two regular outlets on both ends.