boblhead
Member
- Location
- New Hampshire
- Occupation
- Electrician
Any issues with having GFCI receptacles on AFCI/GFCI breakers? Customer wants to make wiring as safe as possible in old family seasonal cottage. Much of the existing wiring has no ground
The nuisance is when there IS a trip, and you don't know that there are two GFCIs in the circuit. So you go to reset the GFCI outlet and it doesn't reset, then you start troubleshooting it, only to (eventually) discover that there is a pointlessly redundant GFCI breaker feeding it that had tripped.No issues besides what Larry mentioned. Electrical myth that they will nuisance trip.
News to me. Care to cite a reference to that?Protecting existing non grounded circuits with a GFCI is no longer code compliant.
Where is that requirement in the code? I don't see it in the 2023 NEC 406(D)(2)Protecting existing non grounded circuits with a GFCI is no longer code compliant. If you change out a 2 wire receptacle from 2 wire to 3 wire grounding you have to run an Equipment Grounding Conductor to one of several places the US National Electric Code (NEC) now allows.
Tom Horne
Part VII. Methods of Equipment GroundingNews to me. Care to cite a reference to that?
Protecting existing non grounded circuits with a GFCI is no longer code compliant. If you change out a 2 wire receptacle from 2 wire to 3 wire grounding you have to run an Equipment Grounding Conductor to one of several places the US National Electric Code (NEC) now allows. Even the GFCI, unless you use a blank face model in a double gang box, changes that receptacle to 3 wire thus invoking the requirement for an EGC to that box.
I once found three in-line on one circuit doing a trouble-shoot: living room, hallway, and bedroom.The nuisance is when there IS a trip, and you don't know that there are two GFCIs in the circuit. So you go to reset the GFCI outlet and it doesn't reset, then you start troubleshooting it, only to (eventually) discover that there is a pointlessly redundant GFCI breaker feeding it that had tripped.
Well, okay this time.My humble apologies to all hands!
Wow lucky you found it! After finding the second one, I probably would have said to myself "there is no way there is a third, nope never been done, tear open the wall so we can figure out what's going on"I once found three in-line on one circuit doing a trouble-shoot: living room, hallway, and bedroom.
I'm a very tenacious troubleshooter.Wow lucky you found it! After finding the second one, I probably would have said to myself "there is no way there is a third, nope never been done, tear open the wall so we can figure out what's going on"![]()
That is very generous of your Larry.Well, okay this time.![]()
In my son's new to them home the home inspector called out 3 different bathrooms for not having GFCI receptacles. Not knowing any better than to take home inspectors utterances as the standard of truth in real estate the seller went ahead and put them in. I know he did it himself because each one was wired to protect the rest of the circuit. I dare to hope that an electrician would have toned out the circuit and informed the owner that their was no problem because the circuit had been protected by the first receptacle on the circuit which also picked up the 3 bathrooms and the rear outdoor receptacle. That's 5 GFCIs in series. I get out to the new house and my daughter in law is asking if I can tell why so many receptacles were dead. I came back the following Saturday and made some guesses based on the experience I gained in the 1970s when GFCIs were a lot more expensive. In tract housing the first required GFCI going out from the Main panel was were that expensive part was installed. After that it would travel as short a route as it could through bathrooms out door receptacles and each place one became required since then. As I found each one I removed the excess cable jacket, overlong wires, and ugly splices and spliced the circuit on through with pigtails to the line terminals only. There are just as many GFCIs but now if one trips off the occupant in the room were it's located can hear the snap and when they check the plug in the outlet they can see the red edge of the reset button sticking out of the face of the GFCI.I once found three in-line on one circuit doing a trouble-shoot: living room, hallway, and bedroom.
In my unhumble opinion GFCIs should be in the room with any outlets they protect, or in the panel where that branch circuit comes from and nowhere else. Installing them in another room from a receptacle/s they protect is just another way to needlessly irritate the occupants.
Tom Horne
