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danwelch's avatar
danwelch
Explorer
Nov 13, 2015

GFCI question

Our Dometic refrigerator is popping GFCI breakers when it runs on 120 volts. I pulled the heating element and it has three leads, one of which is the ground. Connecting these directly to a GFCI circuit at home, the GFCI pops after about a minute – just like at the campground. If I reset the GFCI, it will pop again immediately - until the element cools down. This is very reproducible behavior. So I am replacing the heating element – but I am very puzzled!

My mediocre electrical knowledge would suggest that the energized element is shorting to ground (the element casing) once it heats up and expands. However – here is the odd part – my Fluke electric meter says otherwise. The element has two white leads and these ohm out at 102 ohms. Spec says 104 ohms - excellent. The meter shows NO continuity (infinite resistance) between the white leads and the ground wire - even after the element is heated up and the GFCI is popping. The ground wire and the outer casing of the element are connected – near zero resistance. (That is appropriate.) So, what gives? Why is the GFCI popping?? Any ideas are welcome!!
  • I've heard some places now require refrigerators to be on GFCI outlets in new home construction. Hadn't realized some RV manufacturers were going that way too. My 2016 Starcraft (division of Jayco) still has a regular outlet for the refrig.

    Personally, I think it's a lousy idea for refrig or freezers. I don't think I've ever had a GFCI outlet at home that didn't eventually go bad. I've also had new ones trip with high humidity.

    On my RV the AC outlet is just inside the vent door. Seems like a GFCI outlet would be subject to tripping during rain or high humidity in that case. Of course, they could use a GFCI circuit breaker, which is more expensive.

    My ranting aside... I think I would try to isolate your problem. Maybe disconnect just the heating element and leave the rest of the refrig electronics connected? I imagine you've tried plugging other things into the outlet to see if it ever trips? Or replaced it?
  • A GFCI will trip if it detects as little as 5 milliamperes difference between the current flow thru the hot pin and the flow thru the neutral pin in the outlet. That small current can leak thru a high resistance ground fault.

    Could also be a GFCI going bad.
  • Possibly the leakage is happening through some material that isn't exactly an ohmic connection, but rather breaks down under comparatively high voltage—such as a minute air gap. It might be interesting in a scientific investigation sort of way to see if the voltage at the ground lead with respect to either input changes as the element heats up (obviously with the ground disconnected).

    I guess it's somewhat of a moot point, really, since the element is plainly defective and needs replacement, regardless of what you can measure with your Fluke. It doesn't take much current leakage to trip a GFCI.

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