hillbilly1
Senior Member
- Location
- North Georgia mountains
- Occupation
- Owner/electrical contractor
From what I can find, one manufacture makes them 12-24 volt, so what you have may be dual volt or auto volt. The transformer may be dual voltage too.
And yes, the lighting circuit is 50amp, 24 volts. I believe the original design called for three 20a circuits and the contractor figured it would be cheaper to run one 50 amp circuit. This project is an absolute nightmare.
Yea, as I read it, the NEC requires gfi protection for lighting and other equipment operation above 15v.
680.23(3) GFCI Protection, Lamping, Relamping, and Servicing.
Ground-fault circuit-interrupter protection for personnel shall
be installed in the branch circuit supplying luminaires operating
at voltages greater than the low-voltage contact limit.
I believe gfci is needed on the primary only. I been so wrong all day I may as well go for it again
The relevant code rule is:
680.51(A) Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupter. Luminaires, submersible pumps, and other submersible equipment, unless listed for operation at low voltage contact limit or less and supplied by a transformer or power supply that complies with 680.23(A)(2), shall be protected by a ground-fault circuit interrupter.
680.23(A)(2) Transformers and Power Supplies. Transformers and power supplies used for the supply of underwater luminaires, together with the transformer or power supply enclosure, shall be listed, labeled, and identified for swimming pool and spa use. The transformer or power supply shall incorporate either a transformer of the isolated winding type, with an ungrounded secondary that has a grounded metal barrier between the primary and secondary windings, or one that incorporates an approved system of double insulation between the primary and secondary windings.
I believe gfci is needed on the primary only. I been so wrong all day I may as well go for it again
680.23(3) GFCI Protection, Lamping, Relamping, and Servicing.
Ground-fault circuit-interrupter protection for personnel shall
be installed in the branch circuit supplying luminaires operating
at voltages greater than the low-voltage contact limit.
True other than the fact 680.51 specifically references 680.23(A)(2) which means even though it's not contained of Part I it would still apply.680.23 is under Part II. Permanently Installed Pools.
At the start of Part V. Fountains, 680.50 says: "Part I and V of this article shall apply to all permanently installed fountains as defined in 680.2."
So I believe 680.51(A) quoted by suemarkp would apply to the OP's case with fountains but 680.23 would not.
Yes I agree that is true. But I think 680.23(A)(3) that calls for GFCI protection to be installed in the branch circuit would not apply.True other than the fact 680.51 specifically references 680.23(A)(2) which means even though it's not contained of Part I it would still apply.
But that is not the part of code being referenced by 680.51, only referencing 680.23(A)(2)Yes I agree that is true. But I think 680.23(A)(3) that calls for GFCI protection to be installed in the branch circuit would not apply.
I believe gfci is needed on the primary only. I been so wrong all day I may as well go for it again
680.23(3) GFCI Protection, Lamping, Relamping, and Servicing.
Ground-fault circuit-interrupter protection for personnel shall
be installed in the branch circuit supplying luminaires operating
at voltages greater than the low-voltage contact limit.
So I believe 680.51(A) quoted by suemarkp would apply to the OP's case with fountains but 680.23 would not.
True other than the fact 680.51 specifically references 680.23(A)(2) which means even though it's not contained of Part I it would still apply.
Yes I agree that is true. But I think 680.23(A)(3) that calls for GFCI protection to be installed in the branch circuit would not apply.
But that is not the part of code being referenced by 680.51, only referencing 680.23(A)(2)
680.23(A)(2) Transformers and Power Supplies.
"680.51(A) Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupter. Luminaires, submersible pumps, and other submersible equipment, unless listed for operation at low voltage contact limit or less and supplied by a transformer or power supply that complies with 680.23(A)(2), shall be protected by a ground-fault circuit interrupter.
680.23(A)(2) Transformers and Power Supplies. Transformers and power supplies used for the supply of underwater luminaires, together with the transformer or power supply enclosure, shall be listed, labeled, and identified for swimming pool and spa use. The transformer or power supply shall incorporate either a transformer of the isolated winding type, with an ungrounded secondary that has a grounded metal barrier between the primary and secondary windings, or one that incorporates an approved system of double insulation between the primary and secondary windings."
The Low Voltage Contact Limit is: 15 volts (RMS) for sinusoidal ac, 30 volts for continuous dc .
Otherwise, as we have discussed, a GFCI on an ungrounded and isolated secondary appears to be useless but still required for the OP's situation.
"Lucy, you got some 'splainin' to do!"GFCI can work on ungrounded systems.
All it could do is detect an imbalance between the currents on the two nominally ungrounded conductors. As with any ungrounded system, except for possible capacitive coupling, it takes two faults to provide an external return path."Lucy, you got some 'splainin' to do!"
How would the GFCI know that a contact has been made between an energized conductor and earth or other grounded-surface?
All it could do is detect an imbalance between the currents on the two nominally ungrounded conductors. As with any ungrounded system, except for possible capacitive coupling, it takes two faults to provide an external return path.
The big problem remains of how to provide power to the electronics of the GFCI.
Touch it to your tongueI wouldn't want to experiment with a 9v battery applied to cuts on both hands.
"Lucy, you got some 'splainin' to do!"
How would the GFCI know that a contact has been made between an energized conductor and earth or other grounded-surface?