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Especially if it's clamping voltage is too close to actual operating voltage.A surge suppressor after a GFCI breaker will guarantee nuisance tripping of the breaker.
-Hal
Especially if it's clamping voltage is too close to actual operating voltage.A surge suppressor after a GFCI breaker will guarantee nuisance tripping of the breaker.
-Hal
Not a joke. A capacitor is two metal plates with insulating material between them, you have capacitance between conductors in a cable or raceway, but is such a poor capacitor it normally isn't something we take much consideration of. Make those conductors a hundred, two hundred feet long, it starts to become enough capacitance to matter when you consider the low current trip level of a GFCI. Now fill the raceway with water, and depending on the purity of the water can make an even better capacitor out of it.
A surge suppressor after a GFCI breaker will guarantee nuisance tripping of the breaker.
-Hal
They clamp the overvoltage by passing it to ground. The GFCI will sense that as a fault.
It won't, it possibly will make it worse though.They already have an issue with the GFCI tripping. So how will this be a help?
Is that the same capacitance shown as voltage by high-impedance volt-meters when power is off, vs low impedance solenoid or Wiggy meters?Cable capacitance would have been a problem from day one, unless as mentioned, there has now been a water intrusion..
Every install has different characteristics that will impact this. But long circuit lengths will have more troubles as a general rule then short circuit lengths. 100 feet maybe fine load side of a GFCI, but 150 or 200 and you may see more tripping for no apparent reason but is possibly capacitive leakage current. All depends on how good of a capacitor ends up being developed in how things lay out.Receptacle-connected pool pumps shall be GFCI protected since 2002, hardwired since 2008, NEC 680.21/22
Originally Posted by Jraef![]()
Cable capacitance would have been a problem from day one..
When do GFCI's have trouble with wire-length capacitance? Not found in GFCI listing, or instruction.
Most of the time that is capacitively coupled by an adjacent circuit that is energized.Is that the same capacitance shown as voltage by high-impedance volt-meters when power is off, vs low impedance solenoid or Wiggy meters?
680.21(C) GFCI Protection:Run #10 and put a dedicated twist lock plug on a normal breaker.
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Outlets supplying pool pump motors connected to single-phase, 120-volt through 240-volt branch circuits, whether by receptacle or by direct connection, shall be provided with ground-fault circuit-interrupter protection for personnel.
The code says that?The closer that you can locate the GFCI protection (by code) to where it will be used, the better. As previous post said, if it worked for a year, then the distance should not be the problem.
The code says that?
No, the code only requires GFCI protection or not.
Imo, it's better to protect with a breaker at the source than with a receptacle since the branch circuit conductors are protected in their entirety.
GFCI is for protecting people, the conductors don't need GFCI protection, just short circuit, ground fault, and overload protection is all the conductors need.
That said the longer the circuit the more subject it is to capacitive leakage and non intended tripping of a GFCI if it is at the beginning of the circuit.
Every circuit is going to have it's own differences. Rodent damage, poor installation, etc. can happen even when GFCI protection isn't required.Quite true however if one were to cause a fault upstream of a GFCI receptacle, or come into contact with bare conductors, say from rodent damage, poor installation or whatever reason, they wouldn't be protected against shock whereas they would with a GFCI breaker.
At what distance do GFCI devices become a problem? Surely there are installations with 200' of wire on the load side of a GFCI receptacle, or 200' of wire from a breaker, and they work. Is there a hard limit of distance in the instructions?
eta: Apparently SqD GFI breakers are for 250' or less:
http://www.schneider-electric.us/en/faqs/FA117270/