Rick12
Member
I have a duplex plug in the garage and want to put a sink close and think I should have a gfi. Is it a special gfi outlet, or is there a way to break the hot connector ?
Might be easier to just put in a GFI breaker, if you are not up to determining which receptacle is first is the string, and then do as suggested above.
Few bucks more but easier to do, and protects the circuit from panel out as opposed to first receptacle out.
That depends on the age of the garage and how it has been wired.![]()

Might be easier to just put in a GFI breaker
Current codes require ALL 120V 15 & 20A receptacles in a garage to be GFI protected.
I would find the first receptacle in the string in the garage and put the GFI there, using the LINE and LOAD terminals so everything down stream is protected.
Might be easier to just put in a GFI breaker, if you are not up to determining which receptacle is first is the string, and then do as suggested above.
Few bucks more but easier to do, and protects the circuit from panel out as opposed to first receptacle out.
Thanks for replies.That depends on the age of the garage and how it has been wired.![]()
Thanks for replies.
Garage was built in the 1970's and has multiples of outlets...110 & 220. The duplex plug I want to change has two outlets and two breakers of course. I thought it would be easiest to add gfi outlet, but not sure if there are two types...one for single versus duplex?
There are a lot of homes in Canada that are wired this way. It's not necessarily a full dedicated circuit for each half of the receptacle. They call it "split receptacles" with 2 circuits spread over multiple locations.2 circuits feeding a single duplex is kind of overkill. Unless you have a specific need for this configuration, I'd remove one circuit from the GFI, cap it off in the box, and feed the new GFI with the other circuit. They don't make a GFI that accepts 2 circuits. The circuit will then be there in the box for future use. You can run a circuit from that box to another recep or load in the future as necessary.
GFI's are not problematic if the stuff you use downstream is wired correctly. It takes just as much time to pull OUT a GFI as it does to fix your problematic load. Everything in my shop is GFI protected, and I can't think of the last time one was tripped.agree. I'd offer advice but I only have experience removing GFI's...![]()
I want to change has two outlets and two breakers of course.
There are a lot of homes in Canada that are wired this way. It's not necessarily a full dedicated circuit for each half of the receptacle. They call it "split receptacles" with 2 circuits spread over multiple locations.
GFI's are not problematic if the stuff you use downstream is wired correctly. It takes just as much time to pull OUT a GFI as it does to fix your problematic load. Everything in my shop is GFI protected, and I can't think of the last time one was tripped.
I just wired my new build I used 20amp GFI Breakers for the run's. The inspector loved it and commented that I could have done it cheaper by using a gfi receiptical