TiredDude
Well-known member
My kitchen counters did not have GFCI protection.
The outlets are on a shared neutral circuit, but all the outlets are on the same hot (red). There is another hot (black) that runs through the boxes in the back.
The only way I have found to get GFCI receptacles to work is to wire one for each receptacle on the line side nothing on the load and getting protection on individual outlets.
I can not run new wire here as it is armored cable behind ceramic tile backsplash.
Is there any way to get all of these outlets protected by one GFCI?
I tried passing the hot on the load side and not the neutral, but it didn't work, the downstream outlets remain hot when the GFCI trips.
I resorted to wiring like the attached (although all on red) way but it looks goofy with 4 GFCI outlets in a row.
The outlets are on a shared neutral circuit, but all the outlets are on the same hot (red). There is another hot (black) that runs through the boxes in the back.
The only way I have found to get GFCI receptacles to work is to wire one for each receptacle on the line side nothing on the load and getting protection on individual outlets.
I can not run new wire here as it is armored cable behind ceramic tile backsplash.
Is there any way to get all of these outlets protected by one GFCI?
I tried passing the hot on the load side and not the neutral, but it didn't work, the downstream outlets remain hot when the GFCI trips.
I resorted to wiring like the attached (although all on red) way but it looks goofy with 4 GFCI outlets in a row.
