MechEdetour
Member
- Location
- NY, USA
- Occupation
- Design Engineer
I got into a little back-and-forth recently and it would help me to better understand some of the nuances with GFCIs. It shouldn't come as a surprise that the whole conversation kicked off when I said a GFCI does NOT need an EGC to operate. I've become obsessed with grounding the last few years. Nothing excites me more than when I here someone say that installing a GFCI in an ungrounded (no EGC) outlet solves the issue of not having an EGC. Mainly DIY'ers that take that stance, but there are professionals that agree.
GFCI= Ground-fault circuit interrupter
EGC = Equipment ground conductor
I am going to make some general comments (feel free to correct me if I'm wrong) and then I'll ask my questions about the nuances afterwards.
To help with the thought experiment:
Scenario 1: GFCI WITH EGC wired to ground screw. The case of a device (let the device be a fridge throughout) becomes energized @ 120V. The device has a L, N, G plug.
GFCI= Ground-fault circuit interrupter
EGC = Equipment ground conductor
I am going to make some general comments (feel free to correct me if I'm wrong) and then I'll ask my questions about the nuances afterwards.
- GFCIs do not need an EGC to operate - they measure current imbalance between L and N and trip when the disparity >= 6mA
- EGCs provide a low-impedance path to ground to protect user's from shock when conductive "stuff" is inadvertently energized (ie. ground-faults)
To help with the thought experiment:
Scenario 1: GFCI WITH EGC wired to ground screw. The case of a device (let the device be a fridge throughout) becomes energized @ 120V. The device has a L, N, G plug.
- EGC will provide a low-impedance path, breaker will trip.
- Also, current is flowing from L to ground, and the GFCI may also trip.
- If breaker trips first, fault cleared. If GFCI trips first, fault is also cleared. If GFCI trips and breaker doesn't... Who cares? We're safe.
- EGC is absent, therefore no return path. Shock hazard - case is @ 120V.
- But, a GFCI is in the circuit! Is it possible a GFCI would ever trip in this situation? I would like to think that there is a possibility of leakage current from the case to ground (to ground, not the EGC specifically) to lead to a GFCI trip. @120V, we're talking 20,000ohm of impedance for 6mA. I know the impedance of the human body varies by A LOT, but if a person can have enough current flow through them to trip a GFCI, why couldn't some other arbitrary device? The physics are the same... If there is enough leakage to ground, the device will trip. Right?