letgomywago
Senior Member
- Location
- Washington state and Oregon coast
- Occupation
- residential electrician
I've seen clear promotional ones and they look just like this one.Dang, I've never autopsied a GFCI.
Maybe. Was it damaged when you cut it open though.View attachment 2569896
The bubbled coil on this AFCI may explain why it won't trip via Test button.
I see blue/white/orange/gold, which is 69K, 5%.If that is the test resistor it seems like it should be brown/blue/white/red (16.9k). Looks like it is brown/blue/white/orange (169k)
That's what I see.I see blue/white/orange/gold, which is 69K, 5%.
Yes I was looking at the body as the first band, but, if that is the test resistor, it should be around 17k.I see blue/white/orange/gold, which is 69K, 5%.
It will always have to be sized to flow at least 6 mA at 85% of the rated voltage per UL 943.I'd Already tossed it in the trash bin before I saw the posts asking for an ohm reading. Looking at the picture in my phone it shows as
Black blue grey orange gold brown. Which is a 68k ohm. I'm not sure why that's different than a modern one at 16k. But in the past gfis just needed to be more sensitive than 5ma of leakage current so 1.7ma would be allowed. Now it's 5ma+-1 so it wouldn't fly now obviously. A 16k one would work for a gfi of that modern tolerance pushing about 7ma.
OK so when did that listing come about so strictly. I heard around 2000 was when it changed but am unsure.It will always have to be sized to flow at least 6 mA at 85% of the rated voltage per UL 943.
There is no black (0) first band. You're actually seeing the inside of the case behind the resistor lead.Looking at the picture in my phone it shows as
Black blue grey orange gold brown.
OKThere is no black (0) first band. You're actually seeing the inside of the case behind the resistor lead.
Close enough, 68k... its grey not white...I see blue/white/orange/gold, which is 69K, 5%.
Sounds good.It's white, not grey.
