hohenwald48 wrote:
You have to disconnect what you need to disconnect to stop the tripping. Then reconnect each outlet one at a time until it trips. Involves going into each outlet box to disconnect the outlets down the line. The most difficult problem is figuring where each outlet is in the chain. It's all tedious but necessary. You could have bad wire, bad outlet, bad connection or any one of a dozen other things. You just have to keep digging. These kinds of problems are usually expensive to have fixed by a paid tech due to the amount of time involved. Good luck.
Since you've change the GFCI outlet itself it is likely a true ground fault and can be hazardous.
Thanks for your comments. Did all that - all accept removing the micro to check its connection.