โDec-04-2015 04:33 PM
โDec-05-2015 02:23 PM
tropical36 wrote:kg1d dx wrote:
I have a ground fault outlet on each circuit in my coach, but I keep frying the one in the bathroom. Happens when the circuit is over loaded usually by my wife's hair dryer. My question is why does the ground fault pop? The breaker does not trip. Could this be caused by the wrong amperage ground fault outlet?
A ground fault will obviously trip the GFI outlet itself.
Over current will trip the circuit breaker that's feeding it.
For some reason, using 15amp outlets on 20amp circuits is a common practice, acceptable and evidently legal, so a 15amp outlet being fed with #13awg wire and protected by a 20amp breaker, drawing close to 20amps and without fault, could very well do some cooking, without tripping anything and given that it's the weakest link in the chain.
โDec-05-2015 02:16 PM
tenbear wrote:kg1d dx wrote:
I have a ground fault outlet on each circuit in my coach, but I keep frying the one in the bathroom. Happens when the circuit is over loaded usually by my wife's hair dryer. My question is why does the ground fault pop? The breaker does not trip. Could this be caused by the wrong amperage ground fault outlet?
Lets look at the function of a GFI.
The GFI looks for current flowing in the ground wire of the 120v circuit. There should be no current in that wire. If the GFI senses a current in the ground wire, it trips, shutting off the power to the circuit. It has nothing to do with the current flowing in the hot or neutral wires. That is the function of the circuit breaker.
Edit: Actually, I think it senses the difference in current between the hot wire and the neutral.
โDec-05-2015 02:02 PM
kg1d dx wrote:
I have a ground fault outlet on each circuit in my coach, but I keep frying the one in the bathroom. Happens when the circuit is over loaded usually by my wife's hair dryer. My question is why does the ground fault pop? The breaker does not trip. Could this be caused by the wrong amperage ground fault outlet?
โDec-05-2015 01:01 PM
kg1d dx wrote:
I have a ground fault outlet on each circuit in my coach, but I keep frying the one in the bathroom. Happens when the circuit is over loaded usually by my wife's hair dryer. My question is why does the ground fault pop? The breaker does not trip. Could this be caused by the wrong amperage ground fault outlet?
โDec-05-2015 12:59 PM
โDec-05-2015 12:50 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Note the brand name HUBBELL
It means something
Such as the end of your problems...
โDec-05-2015 09:26 AM
โDec-05-2015 09:07 AM
โDec-05-2015 08:00 AM
โDec-05-2015 08:00 AM
โDec-04-2015 05:19 PM
โDec-04-2015 04:51 PM
โDec-04-2015 04:46 PM