We were called out to a restaurant this afternoon, for a problem with their water heater.
They have a gas fired WH, with 120V power feeding an automatic damper for the exhaust.
Whoever installed this, put a GFCI receptacle in to power the damper.
The water heater was installed in June. Worked fine until Friday night.
Friday night, it tripped the GFCI. They had a plumber out yesterday, couldn't find anything wrong. Reset the GFCI. Plugged in the damper, worked fine.
GFCI tripped again last night. They temp plugged the unit into a non-GFCI circuit. We got out there today, GFCI reset no problem, plugged in the damper, turned up the t-stat. Everything worked like a charm. Checked the control box, nothing burned up, no noticable issues. Circuit board looked fine.
Anyone have any ideas why it would suddenly trip the GFCI.
They have a gas fired WH, with 120V power feeding an automatic damper for the exhaust.
Whoever installed this, put a GFCI receptacle in to power the damper.
The water heater was installed in June. Worked fine until Friday night.
Friday night, it tripped the GFCI. They had a plumber out yesterday, couldn't find anything wrong. Reset the GFCI. Plugged in the damper, worked fine.
GFCI tripped again last night. They temp plugged the unit into a non-GFCI circuit. We got out there today, GFCI reset no problem, plugged in the damper, turned up the t-stat. Everything worked like a charm. Checked the control box, nothing burned up, no noticable issues. Circuit board looked fine.
Anyone have any ideas why it would suddenly trip the GFCI.