Welcome to the forum.On any GFCIs: WITH no load attached, if you touch the neutral pin to the ground pin, it trips the GFCI. WHY? The ground and the neutral are both at the same potential, so WHY?
Internal electronics .On any GFCIs: WITH no load attached, if you touch the neutral pin to the ground pin, it trips the GFCI. WHY? The ground and the neutral are both at the same potential, so WHY?
On any GFCIs: WITH no load attached, if you touch the neutral pin to the ground pin, it trips the GFCI. WHY? The ground and the neutral are both at the same potential, so WHY?
There is ZERO CURRENT FLOW.Welcome to the forum.
Because GFCIs intentionally senses it, to make sure it correctly detects when the line currents mismatch.
Have you put a meter on the internal workings to ensure that?There is ZERO CURRENT FLOW.
Try touching it the other way, touch ground to neutral.On any GFCIs: WITH no load attached, if you touch the neutral pin to the ground pin, it trips the GFCI. WHY? The ground and the neutral are both at the same potential, so WHY?
There is ZERO CURRENT FLOW.
kind of is detected in same fashion as other detected faults. No the basic GFCI function alone will not detect neutral to ground fault unless there is enough current flowing to ground to make it trip. (4-6 mA)The basic GFCI function does not see current in the neutral to ground fault condition. Thus the basic GFCI function does not trip in this case.
As others have described, detecting a grounded neutral condition is a separate requirement detected in a different fashion.
Jon
This also helps prove that GFCI's won't protect you from shock or that they will limit current to 4-6 mA. They just will respond quickly to a fault of 4-6 mA or more.FWIW:
Fluke 87 and T+Pro. EG is conduit that is only associated with this circuit. The T+ is not a low impedance tester but is lower than the 87.
No load on GFCI other than its internal Power LED. Leviton device.
GFCI On: 4.6-5mV N-EG with 87. Paralleled test connection of T+ does not change the voltage.
GFCI Off: 364mV N-EG with 87. Paralleled T+ drops voltage to 71.2 mV.
Set Min/Max of 87 to mA mode. AC. N-EG catches 13.68mA as it trips the GFCI
(Yes, I risked the $13 fuse just for this thread)
So there is current flow.
You're welcome.
If you think about it, a shock is required for it to react.This also helps prove that GFCI's won't protect you from shock or that they will limit current to 4-6 mA. They just will respond quickly to a fault of 4-6 mA or more.
Yes and no. Many (probably most) times a fault has occurred and tripped the device before current traveled through a person.If you think about it, a shock is required for it to react.
going to depend on how much current it can produce and whether it flows in a way to unbalance the sense coil of the GFCI.What if my hair has a bunch of static charge and I touch the N wire on load side of the GFI?