Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,163
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

As was suggested it was the GFCI itself that was the problem when
inductive loads were switched off. I tested every GFCI receptacle in
the house and found that they all test fine using the test and reset
buttons. I found one other GFCI that would trip when the hair clippers
were turned off. I replaced one GFCI with a Leviton unit and tried to
get it to trip and it would not, no matter if it was the washer or the
the clippers. None of the exterior GFCI receptacles would trip. One in
one bathroom and one in the kitchen would trip. Our basement has high
humidity, which I am working on to eliminate. The bathroom gets humid
too. But the kitchen does not, even when boiling big pots of water, so
I don't know if humidity has caused problems or if it is just chance.
Anyway, at 26 bucks a pop from the local hardware store it would cost
a lot to replace all the GFCIs in the house. I need to do some online
shopping.
Thanks for the help folks!
Eric
  #2   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,384
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

On Thu, 02 Aug 2018 08:59:26 -0700, etpm wrote:

As was suggested it was the GFCI itself that was the problem when
inductive loads were switched off. I tested every GFCI receptacle in the
house and found that they all test fine using the test and reset
buttons. I found one other GFCI that would trip when the hair clippers
were turned off. I replaced one GFCI with a Leviton unit and tried to
get it to trip and it would not, no matter if it was the washer or the
the clippers. None of the exterior GFCI receptacles would trip. One in
one bathroom and one in the kitchen would trip. Our basement has high
humidity, which I am working on to eliminate. The bathroom gets humid
too. But the kitchen does not, even when boiling big pots of water, so I
don't know if humidity has caused problems or if it is just chance.
Anyway, at 26 bucks a pop from the local hardware store it would cost a
lot to replace all the GFCIs in the house. I need to do some online
shopping.

Yes, I have had to replace several older GFCIs that were starting to get
nuisance trips. The new units worked fine. I'm guessing that the
constant assault of transients slowly deteriorates them.

Jon
  #3   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,364
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

On Thursday, 2 August 2018 19:43:55 UTC+1, Jon Elson wrote:
On Thu, 02 Aug 2018 08:59:26 -0700, etpm wrote:

As was suggested it was the GFCI itself that was the problem when
inductive loads were switched off. I tested every GFCI receptacle in the
house and found that they all test fine using the test and reset
buttons. I found one other GFCI that would trip when the hair clippers
were turned off. I replaced one GFCI with a Leviton unit and tried to
get it to trip and it would not, no matter if it was the washer or the
the clippers. None of the exterior GFCI receptacles would trip. One in
one bathroom and one in the kitchen would trip. Our basement has high
humidity, which I am working on to eliminate. The bathroom gets humid
too. But the kitchen does not, even when boiling big pots of water, so I
don't know if humidity has caused problems or if it is just chance.
Anyway, at 26 bucks a pop from the local hardware store it would cost a
lot to replace all the GFCIs in the house. I need to do some online
shopping.

Yes, I have had to replace several older GFCIs that were starting to get
nuisance trips. The new units worked fine. I'm guessing that the
constant assault of transients slowly deteriorates them.

Jon


I expect it's caps losing capacity


NT
  #4   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,630
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

"I expect it's caps losing capacity "

If it has any. Anyone ever take one apart ?
  #5   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,364
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

On Friday, 3 August 2018 00:50:15 UTC+1, wrote:

"I expect it's caps losing capacity "


If it has any. Anyone ever take one apart ?


Not me. I presume there are 1 or more caps to filter hf output from the differential current transformer. One day we shall see.


NT


  #9   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,630
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

"Using GFCI breakers is probably more cost effective than GFCI
receptacles when they're multiple receptacles per circuit. "

Not if the place has shared neutrals in the "wrong" place. I walked into a job where they had a guy updating the wiring, and IMO wasn't all that great, but he tried to run bedrooms off a GFCI breaker and every time the 2 bedroom lights were on it would trip the breaker. One or the other would stay on.

The problem ? Shared neutral. Shared neutrals have killed electricians. There were 2 possible solutions, one was to tear out the new walls and require part of the house being careful about the neutrals, or take it off the GFCI and tell them no arc welding in the bedroom. Do it or walk off and they can get a real idiot who doesn't know a neutral from his big toe.

No, you can not just throw in GFCI breakers or a new box with them and expect no problems.
  #10   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,630
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

"I assume each is at the beginning of a run so that all the
non GFCI receptacles downstream are also protected."

Nope. There is no more of that now because the device cannot be the splice.

"I don't know if

that is code or exceeding code."

Then you don't know.

I have found that daisy chaining a bunch of stuff off a GFCI outlet can be troublesome. First of all it causes more nuisance trips. A light over the sink is alright but not a bunch of more outlets. Even better - if you got a bunch of stuff running off of one and it trips, you don't know which outlet tripped it.


  #12   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,630
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

"If it were my house and new construction, they would be ripping out the walls at their expense."

It is a bit difficult to eliminate all shared neutrals, if can be done but costs more both in labor and materials.

I saw licensed, bonded and insured electricians wire an apartment using 3 runs of 14-3 WG. (may have been 12 but if it was it had very thin insulation) I had 2 110 volt window A/c units in 2 different rooms and they ended up on the same side of the 220. I was getting 25 volts between neutral and ground, I had to get one of those extension cords for one of them to plug in into a different outlet. But the point is, there were only 3 neutrals for the whole apartment, an upstairs of a house.

They couldn't tape drywall either. I turned on the livingroom light and it looked like they hung the sheetrock inside out it was so badly built up. And they said "Well it is better than the old plaster ceiling right ?". I said "NO, it isn't". Licensed, bonded, insured, $ 35,000 job. About $ 1.12/sq. ft. which is 32 per sheet. i don't know about you but even though I hate drywall I could bring myself to hang 3 sheets of it for a hundred bucks, and it would not look like that despite my eyesight.

"A good electrical inspector may even require that."


On new construction - definitely. There is no way it can be code. You can go so far with using GFCI outlets all over the place but I am pretty sure they mean for the lights to be protected as well. this would be impossible without properly managing the neutrals. That means neutrals are only shared with everything on the same circuit, no other. And those heavy duty outlets in the kitchen that used to use 12-2 WG with the bridge between the hots cut and one to each breaker, one on each phase, not work. No good, it is a thing of the past. They came in handy, some people have like the microwave, toaster and coffee maker all right together. In most cases15 amps is not enough should you want to run all 3 at the same time. And that is a definite possibility.

I am pretty strict about wiring. In fact we got onw of those "really good" inspectors, Ivan Cucic, dubbed Ivan the Terrible by people who THINK they're electricians. I can understand the guy, he doesn't want people burned to death. And most of the code makes alot of sense. But as far as I can find, the need for arcproof breakers is at the very least overstated.

[political podium{short}] Regulatory agencies need regulation. For example, only a thousand or two people died from electrical fires, something like that, not sure if ANY died because of the lack of arcproof breakers. Take raw milk. If you sell raw milk in many states ad they catch you they treat you like you were cooking meth. A great threat to public safety right ? Yup, like a hundred people have gotten sick from contaminated raw milk that pasteurization MIGHT have prevented. I mean in like the past 10 years. OK ? Was it a knee jerk reaction ? Nope, lobbyists.
[/political podium{short}]

Arcproof breaker requirements are sponsored by manufacturers of arcproof breakers. You know the Teflon tape the local DIY sells you telling you it is code ? That is a lie, it is not required nor has it ever been. By code it is an acceptable substitute for pipe dope. Real plumbers use pipe dope. Another way to spot a wannabe (for the paycheck) is when they use Teflon tape on the nut on a compression fitting, or the nut on a flare fitting. Or on brass. Pipe dope or anything like it is for use on sealing threads only, and anyone who doesn't know the difference should not be doing plumbing. Especially gas.

Another licensed and bonded supposed plumber, puts hot water tank in house, discards steel pipes and puts in plastic. Easy, just run it to the tank and voila. MMM, HMMM.

Gas Kan gets there and says "If I hook up the gas now I'll lose my job. Why ? Mr. Knowitall forgot, or never knew to, put in a sediment trap before the gas valve. Not very important really, all it does is to make sure that a piece of crap from the inside of the pipe doesn't jam in the gas valve and make it stay on when turned off. Nothing big, right ?

Licensed bonded and insured means when they kill someone with their improperly performed work they don't lose their house n ****, especially when working under a corporate shell.

Fukum, we call nobody. In fact even cement work. After the driveway. It is too high. I wasn't here during the contracting of that bur first of all no standpipes, can't plow. I am going to cut them off one of these days. Ad it is to high. now I know damn well if I told them "Oh by the way, same height as the original" they would have tried to say something about code. I would have said "Show me the book". Like I installed a side draft furnace once to have some idiot come along ans say it is not code. Bull****.

I say to everyone - whenever a contractor starts about some code **** that makes no sense, remember these 4 words - "SHOW ME THE BOOK".

I'll bet you a hundred bucks they'll say they don't have one. Or that it costs too much to leave the office. Then you offer to go to the office. The end result is that they will be proven liars in some cases and in those cases they will just skulk away. Yeah "Well I'll get back to you on that". After the runaround you call someone else and they can practice their craft on others.

People **** me off, you can make a good living being honest - as long as you really know what you're doing.

Enough rant.

I know someone personally WITH the book (NEC and addendums for certain localities) and I can call her any time. Yes, she is in the elite union, the ones who wire nuclear power plants, hospitals etc., and one of them want to work on old residential. Some of them would turn down a hundred bucks an hour to do it. Well that's from 5 of them anyway...

Old residential is my specialty, these people do not want licenses or any of tat ****, they want a personal reference or two, and to talk and have you explain the why and why mot of a few things. They'll either forget about a permit or get a homeowner's permit. I encourage them to have my work inspected. There is almost always absolutely even remotely wrong with it, but they might find a few violations on the house I can make a few bucks fixing.

The only time Ivan the Terrible had anything to say was right when the requirement came that if you use a cold water pipe for ground it must be bypassed with clamped wires across every joint from your connection all the way to the other side of the meter. It was easier to just pound in a new ground rod, and he was pleased as punch. But that regulation had come out very recently and I hadn't caught wind of it yet. No problem, a clamp, 15 feet of green # 8 and ba da bing ba da boom.
  #13   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,163
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

On Fri, 3 Aug 2018 20:47:04 -0700 (PDT), wrote:

"I assume each is at the beginning of a run so that all the

non GFCI receptacles downstream are also protected."

Nope. There is no more of that now because the device cannot be the splice.

"I don't know if

that is code or exceeding code."

Then you don't know.

I have found that daisy chaining a bunch of stuff off a GFCI outlet can be troublesome. First of all it causes more nuisance trips. A light over the sink is alright but not a bunch of more outlets. Even better - if you got a bunch of stuff running off of one and it trips, you don't know which outlet tripped it.

The house was built about ten years ago. I looked at one circuit, in
the unfinished basement. This is the one with the washing machine.
Anyway, all the wires are visible. There are two receptacles
downstream of the GFCI recpetacle. On the new GFCI there was a label
that must be removed that covers the screws for downstream
receptacles. The label states that the power to the GFCI must not be
connected to the label covered screws. The screws are for connecting
other receptacles after the GFCI. And the GFCI that I replaced had
wires connected to it that power a couple other receptacles. So what
gives? Are you saying that code requires all receptacles to be
connected directly to the wires from the panel? And the receptacles
after the one basement GFCI are not to code now and weren't when wired
ten years ago? That the GFCI cannot be used to protect other
receptacles? If this is the case then I need to at least change the
wiring in the walls in the unfinished basement.
Thanks,
Eric
  #15   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,630
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

"As usual Jurb's full of ****, ignore him. "

You're the full of **** one here. Look at the ****ing NEC - THE DEVICE CANNOT BE THE SPLICE. You stupid ****.

There, now I have stooped to your level. Go **** yourself.


  #16   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,630
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

"And the receptacles
after the one basement GFCI are not to code now and weren't when wired
ten years ago? That the GFCI cannot be used to protect other
receptacles?"

If it was code when it got wired you don't have to change it.

They made it that way for good reason, if say you have a regular outlet, it has 4 screws for the wires. People had often fed one set of screws and then used the other set to feed more outlets. So if the outlet gets broken ad you have to replace it, in doing so you break the circuit down the line. It could have a shared neutral which means it can be dangerous even with the breaker off.

Now, you have to pigtail it, that is use wire nuts and put together your feed and fed and another set of wires to go to the outlet. It takes a little bit more time but it is required by code so every electrician worth a **** does it that way.

There are still 4 screws on outlets though, but for the right reason, that is if you want them separate like one switched or have the off separate circuits. In the past you could get away with one neutral but now with GFCIs required the neutral side bridge between the screws also has to be cut so it can have its own separate neutral.

In a pre-existing dwelling, most go with the GFCI outlets because then you don't have to worry about the neutrals. the code does not say it must be a GFCI breaker, it only says the circuit must be GFCI protected. Now if you're adding a room to the house, you might find it easy enough just to protect the whole room with a GFCI breaker - just remember everything on that circuit must share a neutral but that neutral must not be shared with anything else. Easy when you're doing it brand new, and also the code is a bit ambiguous on arcproof breakers, you might as well use one for any new construction anyway.

I know the arcproof is required on all new construction, but is a room addition considered new ? Just spend the $ 30 and get the dman thing and not have any problems, and if it is inspected they like to see that anyway. What I do is to just make SURE, and it passes every time.
  #17   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,625
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

All, repeat, all neutrals are shared - at the panel. They all go into the same neutral bar, that is also grounded and typically bonded to the panel as well.

Double pole Ground-Fault BREAKERS share a neutral. And very often have unbalanced loads downstream of them.

GFIC RECEPTACLES (which are NOT breakers) should not share neutrals, and may not be cascaded without massive false tripping.

There is no reason whatsoever for a GFIC RECEPTACLE not to be downstream of a Ground-Fault BREAKER. They are fundamentally different devices and don't really 'see' each other.

No legitimate electrician would put two different legs on the same receptacle - and should any legitimate inspector find such a condition, there would be hell to pay.

I came up doing mostly old-house work, and some of my clients lived in houses first wired in 1913. One house I wired in Manayunk (Phila. neighborhood) still had its original (and working) gas lights, gas refrigerator, gas heat (gravity hot water) and gas stove. I added the first electrical system that house ever had. The owner retained all his existing systems, he wanted AC in the summer. He was also born in the house. Luckily, the front and back walls (built in 1860 +/-) were balloon framed, such that getting wiring to the second floor was not overly difficult. He wanted no overhead lights, but my boss insisted that we put some in the hallway, bathroom and over the front and back doors.

Point being that we always endeavored to have at least two circuits per room, such that if one went down, there would still be power at the other. Whereas code permitted up to ten (10) devices per circuit, we would do no more than six (6) and try to mix both receptacles and lighting. AC receptacles were always dedicated, as were refrigerators and any larger appliances. Kitchen receptacles were made to alternate by leg, so 12-3 would come up and then branch out in 12-2 to accomplish that.

It took a bit more time, a bit more wire - usually, back in those days, about $20 worth - but it made for a nicer job, fewer call-backs and a better feeling walking away.

But the basic thing to remember though this entire discussion is that
Ground Fault BREAKERS are not Ground Fault RECEPTACLES. Once that is figured, the rest follows.

Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
  #19   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,163
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

On Mon, 6 Aug 2018 09:29:27 -0700 (PDT), wrote:

"And the receptacles

after the one basement GFCI are not to code now and weren't when wired
ten years ago? That the GFCI cannot be used to protect other
receptacles?"

If it was code when it got wired you don't have to change it.

They made it that way for good reason, if say you have a regular outlet, it has 4 screws for the wires. People had often fed one set of screws and then used the other set to feed more outlets. So if the outlet gets broken ad you have to replace it, in doing so you break the circuit down the line. It could have a shared neutral which means it can be dangerous even with the breaker off.

Now, you have to pigtail it, that is use wire nuts and put together your feed and fed and another set of wires to go to the outlet. It takes a little bit more time but it is required by code so every electrician worth a **** does it that way.

There are still 4 screws on outlets though, but for the right reason, that is if you want them separate like one switched or have the off separate circuits. In the past you could get away with one neutral but now with GFCIs required the neutral side bridge between the screws also has to be cut so it can have its own separate neutral.

In a pre-existing dwelling, most go with the GFCI outlets because then you don't have to worry about the neutrals. the code does not say it must be a GFCI breaker, it only says the circuit must be GFCI protected. Now if you're adding a room to the house, you might find it easy enough just to protect the whole room with a GFCI breaker - just remember everything on that circuit must share a neutral but that neutral must not be shared with anything else. Easy when you're doing it brand new, and also the code is a bit ambiguous on arcproof breakers, you might as well use one for any new construction anyway.

I know the arcproof is required on all new construction, but is a room addition considered new ? Just spend the $ 30 and get the dman thing and not have any problems, and if it is inspected they like to see that anyway. What I do is to just make SURE, and it passes every time.

I looked online and could not find anything that says I cannot
power other receptacles from the GFCI or that I have to use pigtails
from the GFCI to the wires that go to the other receptacles. I took
the GFCI out to look at it again and two screws are marked LINE and
the other pair marked LOAD. There is no neutral bridge between the
neutral screws on the GFCI.
Are you saying that current code does not allow any other
receptacles to be connected to the LOAD screws on the GFCI? Is that
what you mean by using the GFCI as a splice? If not then please
correct me because I am obvioulsy missing something.
Thanks,
Eric
  #20   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,630
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

"And you're reply is about what I expected from you. "

And your (or would that be "you're" as in "you are" ?) links prove nothing.

However I did find that apparently device can't be the splice is local, not NEC. It is still bad practice in any case.

I do things right and I tell people to do things right. You want to call the city to find out if you can do it the cheap and dirty way ? Go right ahead and have a job that "passes" rather than is "good". Or you can just do it right and not worry about it.


  #21   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,630
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

"I looked online and could not find anything that says I cannot
power other receptacles from the GFCI or that I have to use pigtails
from the GFCI to the wires that go to the other receptacles."

I stand corrected, that is a local thing. On regular outlets it is bad practice, but on a GFCI outlet, that neutral coming off the protected terminal is not going to be shared anyway, it would trip as soon as the other thing turns on.

I would only do it on a new circuit, you KNOW how that is connected.
  #22   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 524
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

On Monday, August 6, 2018 at 12:40:33 PM UTC-4, wrote:
All, repeat, all neutrals are shared - at the panel.


As are load-side live wires (in Europe and Asia, I last heard).
  #23   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 7
Default SOLVED! GFCI tripping problem

EATON GFCIs were known to have issues with Radio Frequency (RF).
http://www.arrl.org/gfci-and-afci-devices

EATON did have a €śswap out€ť (revised design) for these situations.

gb
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
GFCI tripping w/ expresso. Use another plug ? fredinstl Home Repair 2 April 10th 05 02:41 PM
GFCI still tripping fredinstl Home Repair 6 April 9th 05 07:56 PM
GFCI tripping fredinstl Home Repair 5 April 5th 05 05:07 AM
GFCI Outlet Tripping nr Home Repair 10 March 6th 05 08:51 PM
GFCI Tripping constantly barry martin Home Repair 5 December 6th 04 11:18 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:34 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"