โJan-06-2018 07:25 PM
โJan-08-2018 02:15 PM
drsteve wrote:
I built a garage six years ago, and under code here in MI everything had to be protected by GFCI, including inside outlets, outside outlets, the dedicated air compressor circuit, and the door openers. The only exception was the lighting circuits.
โJan-08-2018 09:17 AM
ktmrfs wrote:
One warning, a GFI will NOT prevent all possible electrocution hazards. For example if I have on rubber soled shoes on dry surface and get across the hot and neutral with both arms, good chance the GFI won't trip. In this case there likely would not be enough leakage current to a ground to cause an imbalance.
โJan-08-2018 06:03 AM
โJan-07-2018 07:26 PM
enblethen wrote:
disposal and dishwasher are a fixed appliance and normally on dedicated circuit. They should be hardwired to house wiring.
โJan-07-2018 05:11 PM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
โJan-07-2018 04:44 PM
SaltiDawg wrote:enblethen wrote:
disposal and dishwasher are a fixed appliance and normally on dedicated circuit. They should be hardwired to house wiring.
Like this one??? Garbage Disposal
Or this one??? Dishwasher
โJan-07-2018 04:23 PM
enblethen wrote:
disposal and dishwasher are a fixed appliance and normally on dedicated circuit. They should be hardwired to house wiring.
โJan-07-2018 03:46 PM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
โJan-07-2018 03:16 PM
enblethen wrote:Mine are on dedicated circuits but not hardwired and not required by 2006 code.
disposal and dishwasher are a fixed appliance and normally on dedicated circuit. They should be hardwired to house wiring.
โJan-07-2018 03:13 PM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
โJan-07-2018 03:00 PM
โJan-07-2018 02:43 PM
CA Traveler wrote:
OK if motors etc cause a GFCI to trip then they would be an impossible nightmare on 30A and 50A RV plugs.
Yikes - Yes my bathroom and kitchen counter top plugs are GFCI protected.
Sorry I just spaced out when thinking about one of my GFCI circuits. It has 8 garage and outside plugs with 270' of 14 gauge wire on a 15A CB. Not knowing this my saw wouldn't cut hot butter on the last plug. All wired to NEC and county code as I found out.
โJan-07-2018 02:41 PM
road-runner wrote:
A motor that trips a correctly working GFCI has a real ground fault. I'm guessing the refrigerator exception is there because some fridges do have ground faults and there was tremendous public and political pressure for the exception. Personally, I've had 2 refrigerators and a freezer on GFCI circuits continuously for 9 years with zero trips. I run the RV including the heat pump, air compressors, and an irrigation pump with no GFCI trips. The only trips I have had are from making some mistake when making a temporary connection or with using test equipment (like forgetting that one side of the scope probe is earth grounded).
โJan-07-2018 02:38 PM