Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
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 | Display Modes |
|
#1
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Do you need a GFCI outlet?
On Apr 22, 12:56*pm, keith wrote:
On Apr 22, 10:54*am, The Daring Dufas the-daring- wrote: Limp Arbor wrote: I needed quite few GFCI outlets, simplex outlets, and 20A outlets for my house. *If you've ever bought these you know they are not cheap, at least not $0.59 like the regular stuff. *GFCI outlets are close to $20 anywhere here in NJ that I've been. Started checking around online and couldn't believe how cheap the outlets were at Dale-Electric.com. *I decided to give them a try. There website isn't the best in the world but if you download the pdf of their catalog you can just enter the stock numbers of what you want. *They don't even give you the shipping amount when you complete your order but there is an estimate function. My order totaled about $150 and when the shipping was added $159 was charged to my card from "Hill electric". *Next day I got an email with a tracking number and the day after that I got my stuff. *I have no affiliation just passing on a place that has great prices on outlets. http://www.dale-electric.com/detail?itemnumber=7599-W Could you not have installed a couple of ground fault circuit breakers or were too many circuits involved? If it were only a few circuits only a few GFCI *outlets* would be needed, too. *A GFCI outlet can protect all outlets downstream of it. Correct. That is how I did my basement. Feed goes to a GFCI outlet with 5 other protected outlets on the load side and one non-protected dedicated outlet on the line side. |
#2
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Do you need a GFCI outlet?
Limp Arbor wrote:
On Apr 22, 12:56 pm, keith wrote: On Apr 22, 10:54 am, The Daring Dufas the-daring- wrote: Limp Arbor wrote: I needed quite few GFCI outlets, simplex outlets, and 20A outlets for my house. If you've ever bought these you know they are not cheap, at least not $0.59 like the regular stuff. GFCI outlets are close to $20 anywhere here in NJ that I've been. Started checking around online and couldn't believe how cheap the outlets were at Dale-Electric.com. I decided to give them a try. There website isn't the best in the world but if you download the pdf of their catalog you can just enter the stock numbers of what you want. They don't even give you the shipping amount when you complete your order but there is an estimate function. My order totaled about $150 and when the shipping was added $159 was charged to my card from "Hill electric". Next day I got an email with a tracking number and the day after that I got my stuff. I have no affiliation just passing on a place that has great prices on outlets. http://www.dale-electric.com/detail?itemnumber=7599-W Could you not have installed a couple of ground fault circuit breakers or were too many circuits involved? If it were only a few circuits only a few GFCI *outlets* would be needed, too. A GFCI outlet can protect all outlets downstream of it. Correct. That is how I did my basement. Feed goes to a GFCI outlet with 5 other protected outlets on the load side and one non-protected dedicated outlet on the line side. If you use one GFI receptacle for that, make sure it's not a cheap one. TDD |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Do you need a GFCI outlet? | Home Repair | |||
Do you need a GFCI outlet? | Home Repair | |||
Do you need a GFCI outlet? | Home Repair | |||
is gfci outlet good replacement for two-prong non-grounded outlet ?? | Home Repair | |||
GFCI outlet for radial arm saw | Home Repair |