sparky 1971
Well-known member
I stand corrected.
I stand corrected.
Thanks. I just bought a brand spankin' new 2023 code book AND a 2023 Ugly's for $36 shipped. I'm gonna try to be gooder.
Sleep with it under yer pillow. You will be a betterer person.Thanks. I just bought a brand spankin' new 2023 code book AND a 2023 Ugly's for $36 shipped. I'm gonna try to be gooder.
Ground position on countertop GFI receptacles up or down?One should be to the left of the sink and one to the right of the sink.
There is no requirement to use GFCI breakers. You can use GFCI outlets instead. You can have more than one countertop outlet on each circuit as long as they are AFTER the GFCI outlet/breaker and on the same side of the counter top as the GFCI protected outlet.
I am pretty certain those circuits are not allowed to power anything else.
First, understand the difference between "should" and "must" !Nooooooooooo, You're making up stuff. As long as there are 2 sabc gfci protected in some manner feeding the countertop recepts, they can be in any order.One should be to the left of the sink and one to the right of the sink.
There is no requirement to use GFCI breakers. You can use GFCI outlets instead. You can have more than one countertop outlet on each circuit as long as they are AFTER the GFCI outlet/breaker and on the same side of the counter top as the GFCI protected outlet.
20A or 15AGround position on countertop GFI receptacles up or down?
The NEC does not say “should or must"………. "SHALL" is the word.First, understand the difference between "should" and "must" !
What I was saying is "best practice", not code.
Horizontal. Ground pin to the right. Unless it's to the left of the sink.Ground position on countertop GFI receptacles up or down?
Horizontal. Ground pin to the right. Unless it's to the left of the sink.
Ground left? What if it's to the right of the sink?Ground left is usual around here (Chicago, home of the horizontal outlet), at least among electricians who pay attention. (I see lots of spaces where there's a couple outlets mounted the opposite way from the rest o them. I have so far resisted the urge to fix them.)
It shall face the front of the house or north if the wall is parallel to the front.Ground left? What if it's to the right of the sink?
****. I guess I didn't get as much accomplished today as I thought.It shall face the front of the house or north if the wall is parallel to the front.
An electrical circle jerk?
Apparently, just dont be the green light surge suppressor indicator.An electrical circle jerk?

That says hospital grade. This thread is about kitchen wiring. If someone were to cover the green dot and the lettering and try to use it in a house would it still have to have GFCI or AFCI protection?
.........Ahhhhhh, that was a joke for solving the direction of ground. Since everyone had a direction: N, S, E, W, this was the peacemaker! I used the first pic found. HG and surge suppression was insignificant for my purpose. It would need the required protection specified based on location. Can't say I would want one of these in my home.That says hospital grade. This thread is about kitchen wiring. If someone were to cover the green dot and the lettering and try to use it in a house would it still have to have GFCI or AFCI protection?

I bet if the ground pins were to line up with the receptacle across from it you'd be all over it though. It makes me dizzy looking at the damned thing.Can't say I would want one of these in my home.
I have seen those in hospital rooms and high end office cubicle units. They solve the wall wort interference problem..........Ahhhhhh, that was a joke for solving the direction of ground. Since everyone had a direction: N, S, E, W, this was the peacemaker! I used the first pic found. HG and surge suppression was insignificant for my purpose. It would need the required protection specified based on location. Can't say I would want one of these in my home.
Here's a plain jane version........
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I worked on a "standards" committee. SHALL = MUSTThe NEC does not say “should or must"………. "SHALL" is the word.
Do you consider this best practice?
"One should be to the left of the sink and one to the right of the sink."
Agreed, I have usually found interleaving to make good sense. In Kitchens and workshops too. I think meeting or exceeding code and applying some thought to the layout and usage are the best practice.Hell no. Best practice is to provide receptacles powered so they don't trip breakers. If you have some idea how the kitchen is going to be used, you can distribute them appropriately. That might be "one circuit left side, the other right"; however, it might also be "this outlet on A, that one on B, rest doesn't matter" where you know that two high load appliances are going to get used at the same time. In the absence of specific use, interleaving them is better, but since that usually requires more wire it's not done that often.
The wrong way to do it is to put the GFCIs for both circuits in a two gang box, and then only use one circuit for the rest of the outlets. I lived in an apartment where it was done that way. The whole complex was like that, according to the property manager, who got lots of complaints about it.