Nope, but depending on the location of the receptacle outlet serving the fencer, the receptacle outlet might have to be.jpd24 said:I have a client that has had some bird pens installed on his property in the mountains that has a shed there with power.He had an electric fence installed. Does the fence have to be GFCI?
If it needed to be GFCI protected, it is not because it is for the fencer to plug into. The fact that you're plugging in a fencer does not trigger the GFCI requirement. You could just as easily be plugging in an Easy Bake oven. It is the location of the receptacle outlet that may or may not trigger the GFCI requirement. You say the receptacle will be indoors, so will this be one of the indoor locations where GFCI protection of receptacle outlets is required? (garage, workshop, etc)jpd24 said:Should it be a GFCI since it is for the controller?
There's your answer, then.jpd24 said:It is a 10x16 storage shed in the woods.
Yes, it is a possibility that a fencer, connected to a GFCI protected receptacle, will trip the GFCI. If it does, the GFCI did its job. Matter of fact, it's always a possibility that anything you connect to a GFCI protected circuit will trip the GFCI.jpd24 said:Not familiar with electric fencing, you do not want a GFCI to trip when wild animals try to get into the pens. Is that a possibility? You want the fence to do it's job.