ptonsparky
Tom
- Occupation
- EC - retired
GFCIs for personal protection. Receptacle style.
Why should other GFCI's trip? They don't monitor the EGC.
Maybe I misunderstood what you were saying. If you meant try plugging in to a different GFCI my apologies, though if 2 amps is finding it's way to the EGC, I expect it to trip any properly working GFCI.Somewhere the EG is bonded to the grounded conductor. It was tripping his, wasn't it?
By definition a GFCI is a people protection device and trips at ~5mA. GFCI breakers and GFCI receptacles trip at the same point. If it trips at some other level it is ground fault protection (GFP or GFPE) and not a GFCI.what you brought up is why I asked to check ground lights. The gfci possibly won't trip depending on setting. A gfci on a breaker is different than personnel gfci.
personel gfci are 4 to 6 ma. And wiring/breaker gfcis I've seen set as high as 7 amps.
what you brought up is why I asked to check ground lights. The gfci possibly won't trip depending on setting. A gfci on a breaker is different than personnel gfci.
personel gfci are 4 to 6 ma. And wiring/breaker gfcis I've seen set as high as 7 amps.
This has crossed what mind I have. Someone borrowed my Simpson, so TRMS digitals are all I have, other than T+Pro.As an experiment how much of the 2 amps reading can be attit jump ibuted to the heater vs. the ultrasonic?
Consider the possibility that the DVM reading may be skewed by high frequency currents.
If possible try other meters, analog if you have it.