โNov-07-2013 05:11 PM
โNov-08-2013 09:47 AM
โNov-08-2013 09:45 AM
โNov-08-2013 09:40 AM
ken white wrote:Bobbo wrote:
...Ummmm, the GFCI outlet has power. It is on the pedestal...
I know, I never said it didn't...
โNov-08-2013 08:02 AM
Bobbo wrote:
...Ummmm, the GFCI outlet has power. It is on the pedestal...
โNov-08-2013 07:51 AM
โNov-08-2013 07:33 AM
ken white wrote:DryCamper11 wrote:
Bobbo is right. A modern GFCI will trip even if there's no power on the hot lead. Many of us were taught that the GFCI compares the current going through the hot lead with the return current through the neutral and would trip if they aren't the same. Older GFCI's did that, so if there was no hot current, it wouldn't trip. Newer GFCIs are smarter and will trip if there's no load. You can try it. Stick some wire into neutral and ground on a GFCI socket and the GFCI trips. I've done it. That's what happens. If you do it, make sure you know what's neutral and what's hot !!!!!
I wondered why and got this answer:
"GFCIs contain a second toroid coil which induces a small current in the H and N wires at 120Hz. If the N and G are touching on the load side of the GFCI, there is current flow back through the main panel N-G connection; the sensing coil recognizes this as an imbalance between the H and N and trips the device. "
So, Bobbo is right. You have to disconnect the neutrals (or unplug devices, which disconnects the neutral at the plug). Turning off breakers tells you almost nothing.
Your quoted answer is correct, however, your assertion is not.
The torriod transformer needs a voltage present to test for a shorted neutral-ground wire when no load is present - no current flow.
No hot wire power, and no GFCI...
Test your theory with an uninstalled GFCI and short the ground and neutral together and tell me what happens...
Chris Bryant wrote:
Personally, I would suspect the surge guard. I would start by disconnecting the output of it and see what happens.
โNov-08-2013 06:29 AM
DryCamper11 wrote:
Bobbo is right. A modern GFCI will trip even if there's no power on the hot lead. Many of us were taught that the GFCI compares the current going through the hot lead with the return current through the neutral and would trip if they aren't the same. Older GFCI's did that, so if there was no hot current, it wouldn't trip. Newer GFCIs are smarter and will trip if there's no load. You can try it. Stick some wire into neutral and ground on a GFCI socket and the GFCI trips. I've done it. That's what happens. If you do it, make sure you know what's neutral and what's hot !!!!!
I wondered why and got this answer:
"GFCIs contain a second toroid coil which induces a small current in the H and N wires at 120Hz. If the N and G are touching on the load side of the GFCI, there is current flow back through the main panel N-G connection; the sensing coil recognizes this as an imbalance between the H and N and trips the device. "
So, Bobbo is right. You have to disconnect the neutrals (or unplug devices, which disconnects the neutral at the plug). Turning off breakers tells you almost nothing.
โNov-08-2013 06:14 AM
โNov-08-2013 05:45 AM
โNov-08-2013 05:11 AM
Bobbo wrote:
These are both wrong. Turning off the breaker, by itself, will not do anything to diagnose the problem. The problem is a short between GROUND and a NEUTRAL, and the breakers do not affect that.
You MUST disconnect all of the NEUTRAL wires from the NEUTRAL buss bar to diagnose this. Only with every NEUTRAL disconnected can you know if it is between the breaker box and the Surge Guard.
Sorry, but if there is NO Black 120 power, then the GFCI will not trip if the short is downstream from the breaker panel. If the CG GFCI trips with the Main RV breakers OFF, the problem is BEFORE the breaker panel in the RV. The fact he has a Surge Guard means he needs to bypass it and then see. I have 34 years as a Tech and have diagnoised (and fixed) dozens of these type issues over the years, and what I posted is the BEST way to determine where the problem is located and to start. A GFCI will NOT trip if it does NOT have Black Hot power. Just having a Neutral and a Ground (and a short/imbalance) will not cause a GFCI to trip.
โNov-08-2013 04:57 AM
dougrainer wrote:
Sorry, but if there is NO Black 120 power, then the GFCI will not trip if the short is downstream from the breaker panel. If the CG GFCI trips with the Main RV breakers OFF, the problem is BEFORE the breaker panel in the RV. The fact he has a Surge Guard means he needs to bypass it and then see. I have 34 years as a Tech and have diagnoised (and fixed) dozens of these type issues over the years, and what I posted is the BEST way to determine where the problem is located and to start. A GFCI will NOT trip if it does NOT have Black Hot power. Just having a Neutral and a Ground (and a short/imbalance) will not cause a GFCI to trip. Doug
โNov-08-2013 04:41 AM
โNov-08-2013 04:17 AM
โNov-08-2013 02:56 AM
โNov-08-2013 02:48 AM