โMar-22-2015 10:35 AM
โMar-23-2015 03:31 PM
โMar-23-2015 03:11 PM
DrewE wrote:keepingthelightson wrote:
IF you are connecting the shore power cord to a GFCI outlet on your house and you are expecting the GFCI in your trailer to work. IT will not. You CAN NOT have two GFCI on the same circuit in parallel. You need to remove your GFCI from your shore power at the house.
Good luck! ๐
35 yrs. electrical experience.
That makes absolutely no sense to me. A GFCI works by measuring the current difference between the hot and neutral legs, and tripping if it exceeds some tiny threshold. (The sense of the current is, of course, oppositeโhence it's okay so long as the current flowing through the hot all returns via the neutral).
You can't have a GFCI wired such that there's a neutral return path separate from the GFCI, whether it's through another GFCI or not, but that's a different matter entirely. Connecting one GFCI to the load terminals of another is not problematic and indeed happens quite frequentlyโair dryers, for instance, have GFCI's built into their cord sets (required since 1991), and are commonly plugged into GFCI-protected outlets in bathrooms.
Edit: I guess apparently hair dryers may have immersion detectors rather than GFCIs in their cordsets, which is not quite the same technology, but the basic electrical facts remain.
โMar-23-2015 02:31 PM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
โMar-23-2015 02:25 PM
keepingthelightson wrote:
IF you are connecting the shore power cord to a GFCI outlet on your house and you are expecting the GFCI in your trailer to work. IT will not. You CAN NOT have two GFCI on the same circuit in parallel. You need to remove your GFCI from your shore power at the house.
Good luck! ๐
35 yrs. electrical experience.
โMar-23-2015 01:53 PM
keepingthelightson wrote:
IF you are connecting the shore power cord to a GFCI outlet on your house and you are expecting the GFCI in your trailer to work. IT will not. You CAN NOT have two GFCI on the same circuit in parallel. You need to remove your GFCI from your shore power at the house.
Good luck! ๐
35 yrs. electrical experience.
โMar-23-2015 12:31 PM
โMar-22-2015 09:05 PM
BFL13 wrote:
Aha thanks! I will swap those when I put a GFCI receptacle back in there.
โMar-22-2015 09:00 PM
โMar-22-2015 06:49 PM
โMar-22-2015 06:37 PM
Gene&Ginny wrote:BFL13 wrote:YES
... Hunting for that GFCI would take hours and hours taking out each receptacle I guess, since the usual swapping things around didn't find it. So until I get that ambitious, should I care?...
โMar-22-2015 06:28 PM
BFL13 wrote:YES
... Hunting for that GFCI would take hours and hours taking out each receptacle I guess, since the usual swapping things around didn't find it. So until I get that ambitious, should I care?...
Reese Dual Cam Straight Line HP Sway Control
โMar-22-2015 06:23 PM
BFL13 wrote:It should be dead when it "popped". It sounds very much as if the Line an Load were reversed. When that happens you can not reset it.
... I was surprised when the GFCI receptacle was popped, that it still worked and showed the two lights for normal on the tester, but the rest of the receptacles did not work. I somehow thought that GFCI receptacle would also be dead when it is popped.....
Reese Dual Cam Straight Line HP Sway Control
โMar-22-2015 06:05 PM
โMar-22-2015 05:34 PM
Bobbo wrote:
GFCIs do go bad. Yours did.
I once replaced a full size upright deep freeze, only to find a bad GFCI outlet. DW was NOT happy.
โMar-22-2015 04:40 PM
Bobbo wrote:
GFCIs do go bad. Yours did.
I once replaced a full size upright deep freeze, only to find a bad GFCI outlet. DW was NOT happy.