arfrcchic
Member
- Location
- Watertown, NY
I'm trouble shooting a gfci circuit for a friend. I followed the wiring around, isolating each receptacle. I got to the last receptacle and it seemed to just go away. It was holding with no load (previously it wouldn't hold at all). When I plugged all the appliances back in, that they had originally plugged in, their water cooler tripped the gfci. The water cooler has a grounded plug but all the other devices do not. It holds with everything else but the water cooler. So I tried a different appliance (steam cleaner) that had a ground plug to see if it's the device or if its the gfci circuit wiring. It held with the cleaner running. It's still holding.
So...two questions:
#1- the fact that originally I had the circuit tripping and I had a resistance reading between hot and neutral...then that just went away by the time I got to the last outlet. Was puzzling but now it's holding. Could it just be a fluke?
#2- The water cooler doesn't trip any other non-gfci circuit. The friend wants to just keep it plugged into that non-gfci circuit. I'm not 100% confident that the water cooler is the issue since there was definitely a resistance between hot and neutral and then the problem just disappeared....but if it is, would it be safe to plug into a nongfci circuit if it's causing a gfci circuit to trip? It's holding on the circuit but is it safe?
Thanks for the help!
So...two questions:
#1- the fact that originally I had the circuit tripping and I had a resistance reading between hot and neutral...then that just went away by the time I got to the last outlet. Was puzzling but now it's holding. Could it just be a fluke?
#2- The water cooler doesn't trip any other non-gfci circuit. The friend wants to just keep it plugged into that non-gfci circuit. I'm not 100% confident that the water cooler is the issue since there was definitely a resistance between hot and neutral and then the problem just disappeared....but if it is, would it be safe to plug into a nongfci circuit if it's causing a gfci circuit to trip? It's holding on the circuit but is it safe?
Thanks for the help!