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odd question: in-line gfci?
We're in a new house and the builder did not offer undercabinet
lighting. I had the electrician run an extra circuit to the backsplash, wired to a switch, so I could use this later and put my own undercab lights in. The outlet is dead center on the wall above the cooktop, not an optimal location and I don't want the undercab lights to just plug into the outlet. My options are move the outlet down the wall and inside a base cabinet (romex isn't long enough to do this) or leave the outlet where it is. I'm thinking of removing the gfci from the line and just using wire nuts to make the connection inside the box between the switch and the undercab lights. Then finish it off with a flush stainless steel cover plate. But doing this would remove the gfci protection on the lights. Is this a big deal? I haven't found any in-line gfci modules I could use or anything along those lines. I'd really like to relocate the outlet so it's one less wall plate on the backsplash but that would mean running all new romex between the switch and box and route through the basement. Not impossible but a pain. Even if I leave the box where it is and splice another 4' of romex so I can relocate the box inside the base cabinets, I'd still need to leave the wall plate to access the connection. So if the wall plate is staying I'd rather just wire nut the line from the switch to the lights and be done with it. Thoughts? Thanks in advance! |
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