Diesel Dan
Well-known member
My line of work is industrial maintenance, mechanical side.that is impossible. the WH is not on the load side of the GFCI. The GFCI does not care what is going on on the line side....
pure coincidence...
Once is an anomaly, twice is a coincidence, three times is a pattern.
Over the last 7 yrs this has happened way more than 3 times. Walk into the bathroom, turn on hot water, heater turns on and GFCI trips. ONLY times I have ever had that GFCI outlet trip. That heater is 13kw. Again, isn't common but happened enough to show a pattern. Have never walked into that bathroom and found the GFCI tripped or had it trip while using the outlet. Have used that outlet for loads ranging from the nightlight, space heater, power tools, shop vac, rotary hammer etc.
Our master bath is fed with a 28kw OD heater. When it's on low flow, not needing all 3 heating elements at 100% duty cycle, the LED bath lights will flicker. Incandescent bulbs aren't as sensitive and don't show the flicker but no GFCIs will trip there.
The shop and living quarters are on their own 200a sub panels.
So, if not from that heater, what then? Since it's in the bathroom I plan on keeping it GFCI.
Regarding the AFCI and PC.
Something with the load from the graphics processor is causing it, IMO. And yes it could be the power supply too but until the GP starts requesting higher, sustained power requirements the breaker holds. The PC can be left paused in game mode for 8 hrs and no issue. After couple hours of graphic intensive use is when it'll trip the AFCI. Moved it to another outlet and it did the same to a different AFCI breaker. So yes, the circuit the PC is going to be dedicated for will be getting a non-AFCI breaker.