sparkync
Senior Member
- Location
- North Carolina
I started to put this in the "Proposal" thread, but don't guess I have all the information ready for that, but I sure wish that there was a requirement for manufacturers of GFCI outlets to have a standard as far as reset "operational guidelines". Some brands have "red" resets, which I wished was a standard. I have found in some homes, especially of the elderly, that it is hard for them to distinguish which is the "test" button, and which is the "reset" button when both buttons are all the same color as the outlet itself. I had one new one out of the box, that did have the "green light" on when power was on it, and a "red" light on when it was "tripped" and also a "red" reset button (Leviton brand). This was good and I do like it that way, but for some reason the "red" light stopped coming on when it was tripped and I thought the circuit had no power, when all it really needed was to be "reset". Also some have the "line" on bottom near the "grounding terminal" and others have the "line" on the top ( away from the grounding terminal). I had a customer who changed out a bad one with a new one, and thought he was doing good by just putting the wires on the same terminals as the old one, but didn't know enough to check the back to see which was the "line". It was good for me, since I got a "service call" from it, but bad for him.
This may not be in the "scope" of the NEC council, but I think it would make things a little more less confusing in our trade. I had one customer that had (2) different kinds of GFCI outlets side by side each other in her basement for outside lights and outlets that I had to write on the plywood they were mounted on, the operation of the outlets, so she would know when each one was "tripped" and which one was not. Sort of confusing. Each was put in at different times, so they were different brands. Just a concern. Probably nothing can be done about it, but just wanted to voice my opinion and your thoughts on the matter. Thanks for listening.
This may not be in the "scope" of the NEC council, but I think it would make things a little more less confusing in our trade. I had one customer that had (2) different kinds of GFCI outlets side by side each other in her basement for outside lights and outlets that I had to write on the plywood they were mounted on, the operation of the outlets, so she would know when each one was "tripped" and which one was not. Sort of confusing. Each was put in at different times, so they were different brands. Just a concern. Probably nothing can be done about it, but just wanted to voice my opinion and your thoughts on the matter. Thanks for listening.