OK, I got a silly question. Why does the GFI need a neutral to provide protection?
If a cord is cut, opening the neutral, and the poor slob with a defective drill gets shocked, would not the GFI read current on the ungrounded (hot), but not on the grounded (neutral) and still open?
no because the neutral is required to operate the electronics and trip solenoid in the GFCI. This is the whole basis for the open neutral protection, and why 'normal' GFCIs cant provide the protection, a separate relay is required.