Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Sir Topham Hatt
 
Posts: n/a
Default Yet Another GFCI Problem


I borrowed a GFCI tester to test a GFCI receptacle in my house that was a bit
too sensitive to my liking. Here is what I found

1) I could trigger the GFCI from a downstream receptacle , so far so good
2) I could not trigger the GF from the GFCI receptacle , not good

Figuring the receptacle was at fault, I purchased a new Leviton GFCI. Hooked it
up the *EXACTLY* way the old one was wired (2 load pairs, 1 line pair) and when
I turn the circuit breaker back on, the new GFCI did not work and It could not
be reset with the reset button. The Leviton's have this feature that keeps the
receptacle disabled if it is not hooked up properly, but I doubled check that I
had the wiring the way it was so I'm guessing it was originally set up
incorrectly or the Leviton was DOA out of the box.

I checked all the other GFCI circuits in my house and 1 other one exhibited the
same behavior. I am not surprised since I was the first owner of this 5 year
old house and IIRC I had a couple of other electrical related problems that the
builder had to correct when I first moved in.

Any detail guesses what is wrong?

thxs
  #2   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
John Grabowski
 
Posts: n/a
Default Yet Another GFCI Problem


"Sir Topham Hatt" wrote in message
...

I borrowed a GFCI tester to test a GFCI receptacle in my house that was a

bit
too sensitive to my liking. Here is what I found

1) I could trigger the GFCI from a downstream receptacle , so far so good
2) I could not trigger the GF from the GFCI receptacle , not good

Figuring the receptacle was at fault, I purchased a new Leviton GFCI.

Hooked it
up the *EXACTLY* way the old one was wired (2 load pairs, 1 line pair) and

when
I turn the circuit breaker back on, the new GFCI did not work and It could

not
be reset with the reset button. The Leviton's have this feature that

keeps the
receptacle disabled if it is not hooked up properly, but I doubled check

that I
had the wiring the way it was so I'm guessing it was originally set up
incorrectly or the Leviton was DOA out of the box.

I checked all the other GFCI circuits in my house and 1 other one

exhibited the
same behavior. I am not surprised since I was the first owner of this 5

year
old house and IIRC I had a couple of other electrical related problems

that the
builder had to correct when I first moved in.

Any detail guesses what is wrong?

thxs


Sounds like it is wired wrong. Separate all of the wires from the GFI. You
need to determine which is the feed hot wire and neutral. Once you know
that connect them to the proper terminals on the GFI. Then turn on the
juice and see if it operates correctly. If it does, then connect the load
wires to the proper terminals and check again to see if it operates
correctly..

  #3   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
 
Posts: n/a
Default Yet Another GFCI Problem

yeah wired wrong, consider yourself lucky you found it.

I would check or get inspected the entire electrical system in case
there are more no GFCI issues in your home

  #4   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
PipeDown
 
Posts: n/a
Default Yet Another GFCI Problem

The testers and the button test the GFCI differently.

You may have ground connected between the GFCI and downstream but not
between the GFCI and the breaker box. An outlet tester will help make that
determination.

http://www.codecheck.com/gfci_principal.htm

See second paragraph this page
http://www.codecheck.com/gfci_testing.htm





"Sir Topham Hatt" wrote in message
...

I borrowed a GFCI tester to test a GFCI receptacle in my house that was a
bit
too sensitive to my liking. Here is what I found

1) I could trigger the GFCI from a downstream receptacle , so far so good
2) I could not trigger the GF from the GFCI receptacle , not good

Figuring the receptacle was at fault, I purchased a new Leviton GFCI.
Hooked it
up the *EXACTLY* way the old one was wired (2 load pairs, 1 line pair) and
when
I turn the circuit breaker back on, the new GFCI did not work and It could
not
be reset with the reset button. The Leviton's have this feature that
keeps the
receptacle disabled if it is not hooked up properly, but I doubled check
that I
had the wiring the way it was so I'm guessing it was originally set up
incorrectly or the Leviton was DOA out of the box.

I checked all the other GFCI circuits in my house and 1 other one
exhibited the
same behavior. I am not surprised since I was the first owner of this 5
year
old house and IIRC I had a couple of other electrical related problems
that the
builder had to correct when I first moved in.

Any detail guesses what is wrong?

thxs



  #5   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Kurt Gavin
 
Posts: n/a
Default Yet Another GFCI Problem

I had the same problem a while ago - I think it was the same brand.
It was the wiring, I had to keep trying different combinations until it
worked. A real pain in the ass.


"Sir Topham Hatt" wrote in message
...

I borrowed a GFCI tester to test a GFCI receptacle in my house that was a
bit
too sensitive to my liking. Here is what I found

1) I could trigger the GFCI from a downstream receptacle , so far so good
2) I could not trigger the GF from the GFCI receptacle , not good

Figuring the receptacle was at fault, I purchased a new Leviton GFCI.
Hooked it
up the *EXACTLY* way the old one was wired (2 load pairs, 1 line pair) and
when
I turn the circuit breaker back on, the new GFCI did not work and It could
not
be reset with the reset button. The Leviton's have this feature that
keeps the
receptacle disabled if it is not hooked up properly, but I doubled check
that I
had the wiring the way it was so I'm guessing it was originally set up
incorrectly or the Leviton was DOA out of the box.

I checked all the other GFCI circuits in my house and 1 other one
exhibited the
same behavior. I am not surprised since I was the first owner of this 5
year
old house and IIRC I had a couple of other electrical related problems
that the
builder had to correct when I first moved in.

Any detail guesses what is wrong?

thxs



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 Problem HarryS Home Repair 8 November 20th 05 05:39 PM
Widespread problem with HP Omnibook XE3-GFs? Joe Electronics Repair 1 November 21st 04 05:32 AM
GFCI Breakers Needed in Protected Sub Panel? Jim Home Repair 4 May 20th 04 03:43 PM
2-pole GFCI breaker for Edison (shared neutral) circuit _firstname_@lr_dot_los-gatos_dot_ca.us Home Ownership 2 March 30th 04 02:30 PM
GFCI + Snow = Problem Chris Cooper Electronics 4 January 4th 04 09:27 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:13 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"