stickboy1375
Senior Member
- Location
- Litchfield, CT
Do I still need to GFCI protect LED pool lights because they are fed via driver?
The led lights I have seen were fed from a remote source so there is no contact with the water. I see no reason to gfci protect it.
We the gfci be effective on an led with a driver-- meaning are they 120V source or low voltage?
The led lights I have seen were fed from a remote source so there is no contact with the water. I see no reason to gfci protect it.
That is not true when you are in the water...a few volts across your body can impair muscle function enough to prevent you from getting out of the water.Aren't 12V lights (which couldn't possibly kill you) ...
Every get hit by a telephone wire when the phone is ringing. It hurts.
Well that explains that. But you have put a 9V battery to your tongue. Now take 12v and stand in water. I bet you will be surprised. People can feel a few volts getting out of the pool.Because the phone line has 80 volts or so when ringing.
Well that explains that. But you have put a 9V battery to your tongue. Now take 12v and stand in water. I bet you will be surprised. People can feel a few volts getting out of the pool.
2-3 volts is surprisingly painful....
Back to my original question:
"Aren't 12V lights (which couldn't possibly kill you) fed from a remote source as well?
Does it make a difference? If the 12V transformer can fail and short out on 120V, so can an LED Driver."
Let me add one more thing to clarify:
Aren't LED drivers 12 volts as well?
And I might be wrong, but I think a lot of LED drivers run on DC, and might be wrong even further, but I also think DC can stop your heart easier than AC(being that the heart has a small DC voltage, it's easier for 3V DC to interfere with its operation than 100V AC)
I mean at these voltages we're definitely talking heart failure, there can't possibly be burns and tissue damage from 12V.
Furthermore at 3K ohms resistance, and 12V, the amps will be 4 miliamps, which wouldn't trip a gfi anyway.
A GFCI on the line side of a power supply or transfromer cannot see a ground fault on the load side.Even at 1000 ohms and 12V, the amps would be 12 miliamps, which conversed through the transformer would result in 1.2 miliamps in the primary. Again, not even close to trip the GFCI on the 120V side.