Im having issues with a kitchen countertop gfci at a friends house. It all started when they decited to upgrade their appliances. There was a 20a deticated circuit ran above the range for a microwave. When the new microwave was pluged in it tripped a countertop gfci... Here is the odd things and what i have tried.
The microwave has a deticated circuit, 20a straight from the outlet to the panel but when the microwave is pluged in it trips a countertop gfi that is on a seperate kitchen circuit. I have changed the gfi, ran a new circuit to microwave, pluged the microwave into other areas in the house, excanged the microwave for another new microwave, ran a new circuit to the gfci, and everytime the microwave is pluged in... That same gfi on a different circuit trips every time. Here is the kicker, you dont even have to plug in the microwave all the way into the outlet, all that has to touch is the grounding prong from the microwave to to the grounding inlet of any receptical in the house. Nothing else seemes to trip the gfi, if i plug in a gfi tester to the microwave outlet and push test it doesnt trip the countertop gfi all shows its wired correctly just like it should but the microwave will do it every time. I have changed the breaker for the microwave to the other phase in the panel and also made sure that none of the netural or grounding wires are together (under same screw pretaining to these circuits). I have tightened all connections and still have the same problem. I found out one more thing before i left it alone for the day, if i unhook the load side from the gfi everything works fine, so my next attack i will diagnose the gfi circuit and break it in the center etc. to try to find why it trips. Even if that does cure the problem and lets say i "fix it", the question still how is it possable to trip a gfi on a seperate circuit from the one you are using and why does it only trip that gfi and not any of the others in the house? Also i dont know if i have to say this but if you didnt allready guess, if i put a 3 prong to 2 prong adaptor on the microwave everything works as it should but we all know thats not the correct fix to the problem.
Thank you in advance for any help or sugestions.
- Chris
The microwave has a deticated circuit, 20a straight from the outlet to the panel but when the microwave is pluged in it trips a countertop gfi that is on a seperate kitchen circuit. I have changed the gfi, ran a new circuit to microwave, pluged the microwave into other areas in the house, excanged the microwave for another new microwave, ran a new circuit to the gfci, and everytime the microwave is pluged in... That same gfi on a different circuit trips every time. Here is the kicker, you dont even have to plug in the microwave all the way into the outlet, all that has to touch is the grounding prong from the microwave to to the grounding inlet of any receptical in the house. Nothing else seemes to trip the gfi, if i plug in a gfi tester to the microwave outlet and push test it doesnt trip the countertop gfi all shows its wired correctly just like it should but the microwave will do it every time. I have changed the breaker for the microwave to the other phase in the panel and also made sure that none of the netural or grounding wires are together (under same screw pretaining to these circuits). I have tightened all connections and still have the same problem. I found out one more thing before i left it alone for the day, if i unhook the load side from the gfi everything works fine, so my next attack i will diagnose the gfi circuit and break it in the center etc. to try to find why it trips. Even if that does cure the problem and lets say i "fix it", the question still how is it possable to trip a gfi on a seperate circuit from the one you are using and why does it only trip that gfi and not any of the others in the house? Also i dont know if i have to say this but if you didnt allready guess, if i put a 3 prong to 2 prong adaptor on the microwave everything works as it should but we all know thats not the correct fix to the problem.
Thank you in advance for any help or sugestions.
- Chris