I'm a homeowner-class handyman, not a trained electrician, but I've done my fair share of minor electrical repairs and additions. This situation has me puzzled and I'm hoping to find good advice.
Situation: we relocated from across the country to Texas in August, bringing with us a "secondary" refrigerator that we purchased in ~2006. Regular size, very plain, no icemaker, standard two door top-freezer. It has spent its entire life in two different garages, always on a GFCI circuit, and I do not recall it EVER tripping it in its two former homes. In our current home we have the fridge in the laundry room, but the circuit it's plugged into is an extension of the nearby garage's GFCI circuit. (I do not know the electrical order of the various plugs, but assume the GFCI one is first.....which is in the garage.)
When we first moved in to our current home (built in 2005), this fridge tripped the GFCI plug within about 24 hours, and after I reset the plug it ran for a couple of more days before tripping again. Then I would reset it & trip within 5-10 seconds (the last time causing a noticeable "flash" inside the box - ouch). I thought the GFCI plug had gone bad....I have seen this happen before......so I replaced it, and of course while at it I found about 2 inches of copper wire scorched (obviously from the "flash") so I cut that back to good copper while I was at it.
It ran without tripping for 4 weeks, tripped once and I reset it. It then ran again for 2 weeks without tripping. But this week it has tripped twice. Nothing else is plugged into the circuit besides the refrigerator.
I have read all kinds of debate about refrigerators and GFCI plugs in this and other forums, with no clear consensus as far as I can tell. I think my options are:
1. call an appliance repair service to check out the refrigerator, and bill any repair costs back to the moving company (I still have ~40 days to file a supplemental claim). However, it may be that no "repair" is warranted ,and then I'm out the service fee AND I still have the same problem.
2. replace the GFCI plug with a standard plug.....bad idea for the rest of the garage circuit for sure, and in addition this would leave a refrigerator with no GFCI protection in a laundry room, separated from the washing machine by a dryer.
3. determine whether or not I can feasibly run a new 120V circuit to the laundry room OR (if I'm really lucky and the wiring goes through the attic...unlikely because this is a 2-story house) just move the laundry room's 120V plug to a different circuit. (An attic is directly above the garage, but a 2nd-floor bathroom is directly above the laundry room....and the plug in question is at the far side of the laundry room, farthest from the garage.)
4. Call an electrician and let him figure it out (for a price of course).
5. other options?
By the way, I recently took the time to look at the coils at the bottom of the refrigerator...they were VERY DIRTY so I cleaned them as best I could, hoping that would be the end of it. But no, two GFCI trips since then.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated!!! Thank you.
Situation: we relocated from across the country to Texas in August, bringing with us a "secondary" refrigerator that we purchased in ~2006. Regular size, very plain, no icemaker, standard two door top-freezer. It has spent its entire life in two different garages, always on a GFCI circuit, and I do not recall it EVER tripping it in its two former homes. In our current home we have the fridge in the laundry room, but the circuit it's plugged into is an extension of the nearby garage's GFCI circuit. (I do not know the electrical order of the various plugs, but assume the GFCI one is first.....which is in the garage.)
When we first moved in to our current home (built in 2005), this fridge tripped the GFCI plug within about 24 hours, and after I reset the plug it ran for a couple of more days before tripping again. Then I would reset it & trip within 5-10 seconds (the last time causing a noticeable "flash" inside the box - ouch). I thought the GFCI plug had gone bad....I have seen this happen before......so I replaced it, and of course while at it I found about 2 inches of copper wire scorched (obviously from the "flash") so I cut that back to good copper while I was at it.
It ran without tripping for 4 weeks, tripped once and I reset it. It then ran again for 2 weeks without tripping. But this week it has tripped twice. Nothing else is plugged into the circuit besides the refrigerator.
I have read all kinds of debate about refrigerators and GFCI plugs in this and other forums, with no clear consensus as far as I can tell. I think my options are:
1. call an appliance repair service to check out the refrigerator, and bill any repair costs back to the moving company (I still have ~40 days to file a supplemental claim). However, it may be that no "repair" is warranted ,and then I'm out the service fee AND I still have the same problem.
2. replace the GFCI plug with a standard plug.....bad idea for the rest of the garage circuit for sure, and in addition this would leave a refrigerator with no GFCI protection in a laundry room, separated from the washing machine by a dryer.
3. determine whether or not I can feasibly run a new 120V circuit to the laundry room OR (if I'm really lucky and the wiring goes through the attic...unlikely because this is a 2-story house) just move the laundry room's 120V plug to a different circuit. (An attic is directly above the garage, but a 2nd-floor bathroom is directly above the laundry room....and the plug in question is at the far side of the laundry room, farthest from the garage.)
4. Call an electrician and let him figure it out (for a price of course).
5. other options?
By the way, I recently took the time to look at the coils at the bottom of the refrigerator...they were VERY DIRTY so I cleaned them as best I could, hoping that would be the end of it. But no, two GFCI trips since then.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated!!! Thank you.

