Multi GFCI's daisy chained

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Cletis

Senior Member
Location
OH
I"ve always heard rumors that multiple gfci outlets that are daisy chained together can interfere with each other causing lots of false trips and i've just believed it til today. Is this true, if so, why ? Or is it an another electrical urban myth ?
 

K8MHZ

Senior Member
Location
Michigan. It's a beautiful peninsula, I've looked
Occupation
Electrician
I"ve always heard rumors that multiple gfci outlets that are daisy chained together can interfere with each other causing lots of false trips and i've just believed it til today. Is this true, if so, why ? Or is it an another electrical urban myth ?

I haven't heard of any real problems with the practice.

Who told you there would be such a problem?
 

Cletis

Senior Member
Location
OH
I haven't heard of any real problems with the practice.

Who told you there would be such a problem?

Multiple people over the years really. Many of them ol' time master electricians and other electricians. Generally, just showed up, put a new one in on first device, removed unneeded ones and went back to work. Got a call today same situation and started thinking about it, hence the thread
 

K8MHZ

Senior Member
Location
Michigan. It's a beautiful peninsula, I've looked
Occupation
Electrician
Multiple people over the years really. Many of them ol' time master electricians and other electricians. Generally, just showed up, put a new one in on first device, removed unneeded ones and went back to work. Got a call today same situation and started thinking about it, hence the thread

What was the nature of the call? Does someone want you to remove GFCI receptacles? Do you have a customer that is having false trip problems and they think it's due to multiple GFCI devices?

From my personal experience, I don't think GFCI devices will false trip because of other such devices on the same circuit because I have not ever seen it happen.

When I hear rumors about our trade, rather than just believe it, I want to see it happen and then get to perform some tests on the circuit.
 

templdl

Senior Member
Location
Wisconsin
I don't see that there is an issue with multiple GFCI daisy chained. It would only lead to a pot luck issue if there ever was a GF as to which one would trip.
BUT, to my surprise after changing 2 outdoor outlets to GFCIs the owner complained of a nuisance tripping issue.
I then concluded that one outlet feed the other and I simply replaced the downstream outlet with a std outlet and the problem was solved. Using a GFCI tester everything worked as anticipated.
So, go figure.
 

FREEBALL

Senior Member
Location
york pa usa
when you say daisy chained do you mean the load of the first GFI feeds the line of the second gfi ? If so yes there can be some nuisance triping pending on the trip curve of the gfi pending on device construction and manufacture. But if they are tapped to line side for each, there shouldn't be an issue
 

James L

Senior Member
Location
Kansas Cty, Mo, USA
Occupation
Electrician
when you say daisy chained do you mean the load of the first GFI feeds the line of the second gfi ?

Tends to make communication easier when we use terms like line and load, rather than daisy-chain and downstream, doesn't it?

And I agree with you installing a gfci on the load side of a gfci can cause nuisance tripping.

fwiw, I've seen it more with Leviton than with Eagle or P&S, but that is an entirely subjective observation.
 

GerryB

Senior Member
Tends to make communication easier when we use terms like line and load, rather than daisy-chain and downstream, doesn't it?

And I agree with you installing a gfci on the load side of a gfci can cause nuisance tripping.

fwiw, I've seen it more with Leviton than with Eagle or P&S, but that is an entirely subjective observation.
What would even be the point to that? I would think you either pigtail and use gfi's where needed or one gfi and feed thru to he other outlets.
 

James L

Senior Member
Location
Kansas Cty, Mo, USA
Occupation
Electrician
What would even be the point to that? I would think you either pigtail and use gfi's where needed or one gfi and feed thru to he other outlets.

I've mostly seen it in homes where the homeowner (or a handyman) was trying to update the bathroom and kitchen plugs, install a gfci device at every location and wire every one with line/load.

Or not realizing that maybe there's already a gfci breaker for bath/garage/wp receps, or a gfci recep next to the panel that's protecting those areas.

I've also seen lazy electricians make the same mistake, not taking the time to check when they should know better
 

Cletis

Senior Member
Location
OH
when you say daisy chained do you mean the load of the first GFI feeds the line of the second gfi ? If so yes there can be some nuisance triping pending on the trip curve of the gfi pending on device construction and manufacture. But if they are tapped to line side for each, there shouldn't be an issue

Yes, they went in line and out the load to each one. There were 5 total. There were 8 receptacles on that circuit as it ended up.
 

GoldDigger

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Placerville, CA, USA
Occupation
Retired PV System Designer
One thing to keep in mind is that the test button on each GFCI receptacle should only trip that one unit, while a plug in tester could trip any or all of the upstream (line side) receptacles too.
(Just as an actual fault could.)
 

James L

Senior Member
Location
Kansas Cty, Mo, USA
Occupation
Electrician
I also saw it once at a whirlpool tub. Electrician couldn't find any gcfi device or breaker, so he put one under the tub.

Numnutz didn't realize somebody had fed the tub from the receptacle at the sink
 

GoldDigger

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Placerville, CA, USA
Occupation
Retired PV System Designer
I also saw it once at a whirlpool tub. Electrician couldn't find any gcfi device or breaker, so he put one under the tub.

Numnutz didn't realize somebody had fed the tub from the receptacle at the sink
As long as he provided an access panel it would not be uncommon.... :)
 

ceb58

Senior Member
Location
Raeford, NC
I had a "lively" discussion with one of our maint. workers today about GFCI's. He was going to replace the GFCI mounted in one of our generators with a standard receptacle. He tried to tell me the GFCI was tripping on over load.
The circuit to the generator is a dedicated 20 amp with a duplex 20 amp rated GFCI. The battery charger is wired off of the line side in case it dose trip it will not kill the charger. There is a 1000w block heater and a 850w battery blanket. So the max load wouldn't be but around 17 amps max. if all three were on at the same time.
Could not get him to understand that a GFCI doesn't trip on overload and if it was tripping my money was on the block heater leaking current to ground.
 

growler

Senior Member
Location
Atlanta,GA
I"ve always heard rumors that multiple gfci outlets that are daisy chained together can interfere with each other causing lots of false trips and i've just believed it til today. Is this true, if so, why ? Or is it an another electrical urban myth ?

Yes, they went in line and out the load to each one. There were 5 total. There were 8 receptacles on that circuit as it ended up.


I see this a lot on bathroom receptacle circuits. In older homes with only one circuit feeding every bath receptacle in the house there may be a GFCI breaker in the panel and a GFCI type receptacle in every bathroom.

What I think happens is that homeowners and handymem don't normally have any scrap wire and wire nuts when they install the GFCI receptacles so they tend to use the line and load terminals on every GFCI and this does cause problems.
 
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