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GFCI trips on a separate circuit
Sometimes my microwave trips the other circuit that has our computers
on it, even though the appliance is on a different circuit at the far end of the house. This happens maybe 1 out of 3 starts. I've replaced the GFCI and it still trips; moved the microwave to a third different circuit - same problem. The microwave has been working normally for almost 5 years, but has recently started making a buzzing sound on start up. |
GFCI trips on a separate circuit
If they are truly on separate circuits then what you describe is happening
should not be possible. Perhaps the circuits have a common (improperly terminated) neutral wire and the devices are floating and are seeing transients during start up? Bob wrote in message ... Sometimes my microwave trips the other circuit that has our computers on it, even though the appliance is on a different circuit at the far end of the house. This happens maybe 1 out of 3 starts. I've replaced the GFCI and it still trips; moved the microwave to a third different circuit - same problem. The microwave has been working normally for almost 5 years, but has recently started making a buzzing sound on start up. |
GFCI trips on a separate circuit
The microwave oven should be operated on its own circuit breaker from
the panel. It is best to use a standard type circuit breaker for a microwave oven, because of its characteristics. Jerry G. On May 26, 10:24*pm, wrote: Sometimes my microwave trips the other circuit that has our computers on it, even though the appliance is on a different circuit at the far end of the house. This happens maybe 1 out of 3 starts. I've replaced the GFCI and it still trips; moved the microwave to a third different circuit - same problem. The microwave has been working normally for almost 5 years, but has recently started making a buzzing sound on start up. |
GFCI trips on a separate circuit
On May 26, 6:24 pm, wrote:
The microwave has been working normally for almost 5 years, but has recently started making a buzzing sound on start up. Sounds like your microwave is the culprit and ready to die. GFCI circuits must be fairly sensitive to sense small inbalances in current in their respective circuit. If the microwave is injecting significant EMI back into your house circuit, no telling what could happen. You could test this theory if you have some sort of emi filter you could plug the microwave into between the outlet and oven. I don't know if a surge protector power strip provides any sort of emi filtering or if it just protects against over voltage spikes. |
GFCI trips on a separate circuit
On May 27, 10:46*am, dodger741 wrote:
On May 26, 6:24 pm, wrote: The microwave has been working normally for almost 5 years, but has recently started making a buzzing sound on start up. Sounds like your microwave is the culprit and ready to die. *GFCI circuits must be fairly sensitive to sense small inbalances in current in their respective circuit. *If the microwave is injecting significant EMI back into your house circuit, no telling what could happen. *You could test this theory if you have some sort of emi filter you could plug the microwave into between the outlet and oven. I don't know if a surge protector power strip provides any sort of emi filtering or if it just protects against over voltage spikes. You could borrow a neighbors microwave for an hour and put it on the circuit where your microwave trips the GFI. If both microwaves trip the GFI, you have a problem unrelated to the microwave and probably some sort of leakage on the other circuit that makes it more sensitive to the minor surges that the microwave causes when it switches. |
GFCI trips on a separate circuit
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GFCI trips on a separate circuit
Because important details are missing, then different answers are
provided; all correct because each is based upon different assumptions. Bob Shuman's and bz's answers assume a GFCI in the breaker box. As correctly noted, a GFCI's white neutral wire must remains electrically separated from all other neutral wires. And both black (hot) and white (neutral) wires must be keep separate from other circuits so that even milliamps cannot leak through a partially penetrated wire insulation. If GFCI is in the kitchen, then dodger741's answer is relevant. That assumes the computer is somehow on the same circuit. Not clear from your post which circuit has the GFCI. Paul's questions about environment when tripping occurs is also relevant. And finally, if the microwave is generating too much common mode noise, then common mode filtering in a computer (on a GFCI circuit) could trip that GFCI. But that would have to be a massive common mode noise generator - would definitively interfere with other radio frequency equipment (AM radio, TV screen?). On May 26, 10:24*pm, wrote: Sometimes my microwave trips the other circuit that has our computers on it, even though the appliance is on a different circuit at the far end of the house. This happens maybe 1 out of 3 starts. I've replaced the GFCI and it still trips; moved the microwave to a third different circuit - same problem. The microwave has been working normally for almost 5 years, but has recently started making a buzzing sound on start up. |
GFCI trips on a separate circuit
w_tom writes:
Because important details are missing, then different answers are provided; all correct because each is based upon different assumptions. Bob Shuman's and bz's answers assume a GFCI in the breaker box. As correctly noted, a GFCI's white neutral wire must remains electrically separated from all other neutral wires. And both black (hot) and white (neutral) wires must be keep separate from other circuits so that even milliamps cannot leak through a partially penetrated wire insulation. If GFCI is in the kitchen, then dodger741's answer is relevant. That assumes the computer is somehow on the same circuit. Not clear from your post which circuit has the GFCI. Paul's questions about environment when tripping occurs is also relevant. And finally, if the microwave is generating too much common mode noise, then common mode filtering in a computer (on a GFCI circuit) could trip that GFCI. But that would have to be a massive common mode noise generator - would definitively interfere with other radio frequency equipment (AM radio, TV screen?). On May 26, 10:24*pm, wrote: Sometimes my microwave trips the other circuit that has our computers on it, even though the appliance is on a different circuit at the far end of the house. This happens maybe 1 out of 3 starts. I've replaced the GFCI and it still trips; moved the microwave to a third different circuit - same problem. The microwave has been working normally for almost 5 years, but has recently started making a buzzing sound on start up. It might be worth taking the microwave and trying it on a circuit WITH a GFCI (preferably, both the computer circuit and another one). It should not trip. --- sam | Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ: http://www.repairfaq.org/ Repair | Main Table of Contents: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/ +Lasers | Sam's Laser FAQ: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/lasersam.htm | Mirror Sites: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/F_mirror.html Important: Anything sent to the email address in the message header above is ignored unless my full name AND either lasers or electronics is included in the subject line. Or, you can contact me via the Feedback Form in the FAQs. |
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