Hello all.
I'm having a serious problem with a pair of GFCI receptacles.
The setup:
A new service pole with a 30 circuit main breaker panel below the meter base. On each side of the panel a 20 amp GFCI receptacle is mounted in a weatherproof box with a weatherproof in use cover.
Each receptacle is supplied by a 20 amp single pole breaker.
The problem:
Both receptacles are randomly tripping with nothing connected to them. The 20 amp receptacles were tripping anywhere from 15 seconds to 5 minutes after being reset.
Attempted solutions:
1. Replaced both receptacles with new 20 amp receptacles. Problem continued.
2. Replaced both receptacles with new 15 amp receptacles. One receptacle was good for approximately 90 minutes. The second lasted close to two hours.
Other observations:
Voltages look good. Connections have been quadruple checked. EGC, grounded and ungrounded conductors are where they are supposed to be.
I'm unsure of anything that could make a GFCI trip with no load connected. Anyone have thoughts?
-Josh
I'm having a serious problem with a pair of GFCI receptacles.
The setup:
A new service pole with a 30 circuit main breaker panel below the meter base. On each side of the panel a 20 amp GFCI receptacle is mounted in a weatherproof box with a weatherproof in use cover.
Each receptacle is supplied by a 20 amp single pole breaker.
The problem:
Both receptacles are randomly tripping with nothing connected to them. The 20 amp receptacles were tripping anywhere from 15 seconds to 5 minutes after being reset.
Attempted solutions:
1. Replaced both receptacles with new 20 amp receptacles. Problem continued.
2. Replaced both receptacles with new 15 amp receptacles. One receptacle was good for approximately 90 minutes. The second lasted close to two hours.
Other observations:
Voltages look good. Connections have been quadruple checked. EGC, grounded and ungrounded conductors are where they are supposed to be.
I'm unsure of anything that could make a GFCI trip with no load connected. Anyone have thoughts?
-Josh