Ok, EE/Controls engineer here, but I'm not electrician and I've been doing mostly automation for 30 years.
I'm having a little issue with our home that we had built about 6 years ago. We did a lot of the work ourselves, but the electrical was done 100 percent by a large local electrical company.
We have surface mounted outlets under our upper kitchen cabinets rather than in the wall in our backsplash. A few weeks ago, I unmounted them (but did not un-wire them, left them dangling), and installed a tile backsplash.
For whatever reason, when they wired these outlets they installed remote GFCI units in a closet, then ran the power from there to the kitchen outlets.
As I was re-installing the outlets, I got a pretty good zap from one of them even though I had intentionally tripped all the GFCI's. Confused, I grabbed my meter. With the GFCI still tripped, I read ~90VAC from line to neutral, and 120VAC from line to ground! What in the world.... There are 3 outlets run from this GFCI and they all read the same.
So I went back and turned off the breaker supplying that GFCI and pulled the GFCI out of the wall. I disconnected two black wires connected to the hot "Load" terminal, and turned the breaker back on. With the GFCI tripped still, I am getting 120VAC from the hot load terminal to neutral and ground! Can a GFCI unit really fail in an unsafe manner like that, or do I have a more complicated wiring issue going on?
Thanks for any ideas.
I'm having a little issue with our home that we had built about 6 years ago. We did a lot of the work ourselves, but the electrical was done 100 percent by a large local electrical company.
We have surface mounted outlets under our upper kitchen cabinets rather than in the wall in our backsplash. A few weeks ago, I unmounted them (but did not un-wire them, left them dangling), and installed a tile backsplash.
For whatever reason, when they wired these outlets they installed remote GFCI units in a closet, then ran the power from there to the kitchen outlets.
As I was re-installing the outlets, I got a pretty good zap from one of them even though I had intentionally tripped all the GFCI's. Confused, I grabbed my meter. With the GFCI still tripped, I read ~90VAC from line to neutral, and 120VAC from line to ground! What in the world.... There are 3 outlets run from this GFCI and they all read the same.
So I went back and turned off the breaker supplying that GFCI and pulled the GFCI out of the wall. I disconnected two black wires connected to the hot "Load" terminal, and turned the breaker back on. With the GFCI tripped still, I am getting 120VAC from the hot load terminal to neutral and ground! Can a GFCI unit really fail in an unsafe manner like that, or do I have a more complicated wiring issue going on?
Thanks for any ideas.
