GFI won't trip

Status
Not open for further replies.

dale46

Member
I have a GFI recept in a kitchen on a 2 wire system-no ground.The GFI will trip when you press the test button.It will not trip using a plug in GFI tester.My question is would it make any difference to install GFI brkr?I don't think it will. I'd appreciate any input.Thanks
 

augie47

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Tennessee
Occupation
State Electrical Inspector (Retired)
won't make a difference. GF "testers" won't work on two wiire systems ..
manufacturer recommends using their test button. If that works, you are good to go,.
 

Sierrasparky

Senior Member
Location
USA
Occupation
Electrician ,contractor
There is no ground so the tester is not making a connection to ground for the test.
 

LarryFine

Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
Location
Henrico County, VA
Occupation
Electrical Contractor
I have a GFI recept in a kitchen on a 2 wire system-no ground.The GFI will trip when you press the test button.It will not trip using a plug in GFI tester.My question is would it make any difference to install GFI brkr?I don't think it will. I'd appreciate any input.Thanks
A GFCI receptacle's test button works by connecting a resistor from the hot wire after the current sensor to the neutral ahead of the current sensor, which mimics someone receiving a shock.

A plug-in GFCI tester works by connecting a resistor from the hot wire after the current sensor to the ground wire, because it has no way of accessing the neutral ahead of the current sensor.

No ground connection results in no shock-mimicking current. Note that a ground "cheater" (3-prong to 2-prong adapter) with the ground tab or wire grounded, will allow a plug-in tester to function.
 

dale46

Member
Thanks for the feedback.I thought the problem was probably with the 2-wire system,not having a ground wire.Thanks
 

infinity

Moderator
Staff member
Location
New Jersey
Occupation
Journeyman Electrician
Thanks for the feedback.I thought the problem was probably with the 2-wire system,not having a ground wire.Thanks

Yes that's it and that is one reason why you should only be using the test button to test the GFCI receptacle in the first place. Those plugin testers can actually give you a shock if the conditions are right. Larry has a nice explanation as to why one method (the device test button) works and the other doesn't.
 

JFletcher

Senior Member
Location
Williamsburg, VA
All 3 prong receptacles that are GFI protected but only have two wire circuits should have stickers on them that read "GFI Protected / No Equipment Ground". I would guess that part of the reason for this is because when you put a plug tester in such a receptacle, it will not trip the tester... The only way to test those receptacles properly is to trip the Upstream GFI and verify power is dead.

GFI receptacles and Breakers work perfectly well with two wire systems, the ground wire is irrelevant for their operation
 

petersonra

Senior Member
Location
Northern illinois
Occupation
engineer
I have a GFI recept in a kitchen on a 2 wire system-no ground.The GFI will trip when you press the test button.It will not trip using a plug in GFI tester.My question is would it make any difference to install GFI brkr?I don't think it will. I'd appreciate any input.Thanks

that is the way it should be. the plug in testers are pretty much useless for testing the GFI part of a receptacle. use the test button on the receptacle.
 

dale46

Member
that is the way it should be. the plug in testers are pretty much useless for testing the GFI part of a receptacle. use the test button on the receptacle.

Thanks for the input. I didn't realize those GFI testers test between hot and ground.I thought they tested between hot and neutral mimicking how the device actually works.
 

infinity

Moderator
Staff member
Location
New Jersey
Occupation
Journeyman Electrician
Thanks for the input. I didn't realize those GFI testers test between hot and ground.I thought they tested between hot and neutral mimicking how the device actually works.

The neutral slot on the receptacle is after the internal circuit monitor so no plugin tester will connect before it leaving only the EGC for it to send the test current.
 

kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
All 3 prong receptacles that are GFI protected but only have two wire circuits should have stickers on them that read "GFI Protected / No Equipment Ground". I would guess that part of the reason for this is because when you put a plug tester in such a receptacle, it will not trip the tester... The only way to test those receptacles properly is to trip the Upstream GFI and verify power is dead.

GFI receptacles and Breakers work perfectly well with two wire systems, the ground wire is irrelevant for their operation
The reason for the stickers is to give code making panel and inspectors a warm fuzzy feeling. Typical user has no clue what they mean.

Thanks for the input. I didn't realize those GFI testers test between hot and ground.I thought they tested between hot and neutral mimicking how the device actually works.
Any current between the "hot" and "neutral" of the receptacle or "load terminals" is seen as normal expected load. Any current that leaks outside that path is abnormal, and once it exceeds 4-6 mA trips the device. The test button sends test current outside the protected path, one side of "line" conductors to opposite side of "load" conductors". This path is outside of the current transformer that monitors the intended current path.
 

LarryFine

Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
Location
Henrico County, VA
Occupation
Electrical Contractor
The only way to test those receptacles properly is to trip the Upstream GFI and verify power is dead.
Well, there is another way. I use my solenoid tester to check for GFCI protection by plugging one probe in the receptacle's hot slot and grounding the other probe. Anything from an extension cord to a nearby sink's faucet (presuming metal piping) to any nearby grounded surface will work.
 

kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
Well, there is another way. I use my solenoid tester to check for GFCI protection by plugging one probe in the receptacle's hot slot and grounding the other probe. Anything from an extension cord to a nearby sink's faucet (presuming metal piping) to any nearby grounded surface will work.
Digital meter with a low impedance setting works also. Or any load you can imagine over 6 mA connected to a point inside and a point outside the GFCI protected circuit will trip it.

This includes getting the "hot" from elsewhere and the "neutral" via the GFCI protected circuit.
 

don_resqcapt19

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Illinois
Occupation
retired electrician
The reason for the stickers is to give code making panel and inspectors a warm fuzzy feeling. Typical user has no clue what they mean.
...
I think the real reason for those stickers is 250.114....something no user has any clue about, and most inspectors don't either. They added Informational Note #2 following 406.4(D)(2) in the 2017 code to call attention to the requirements in 250.114.
 

kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
I think the real reason for those stickers is 250.114....something no user has any clue about, and most inspectors don't either. They added Informational Note #2 following 406.4(D)(2) in the 2017 code to call attention to the requirements in 250.114.
I'll stand by what I previously said. Electricians will see that sticker and realize there isn't an EGC, they might even say to themselves 'someone must know the codes'. Most users won't know or care what that sticker means. Inspectors will be happy because code was followed though it didn't really matter one bit on this one.
 

JFletcher

Senior Member
Location
Williamsburg, VA
I'll stand by what I previously said. Electricians will see that sticker and realize there isn't an EGC, they might even say to themselves 'someone must know the codes'. Most users won't know or care what that sticker means. Inspectors will be happy because code was followed though it didn't really matter one bit on this one.

I had a home inspector write up the GFCI receptacle in the kitchen did not trip with his tester, even though it was marked with those stickers, and the GFCI not only work, it was one of the new self-testing ones as well.

Other people's children....lol
 

kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
I had a home inspector write up the GFCI receptacle in the kitchen did not trip with his tester, even though it was marked with those stickers, and the GFCI not only work, it was one of the new self-testing ones as well.

Other people's children....lol
Don't confuse the "self testing" feature with the procedure of pressing the test button, they are not the same thing. Pressing that test button actually creates a real unbalance current condition and the device should mechanically open the circuit.

The self test feature is constantly monitoring the electronics of the device for whatever malfunctions it was designed to detect (find it hard to believe it can detect and act upon all possibilities but can be designed to work for many foreseeable possibilities) and will lock itself out should it fail self testing. Failure of self testing from what I know usually means the device needs replaced, there is no resetting after such failure.

Old GFCI's when failed to function, would often continue to allow power to pass through, with no GFCI protection.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top