- Location
- Bremerton, Washington
- Occupation
- Master Electrician
A 2 wire receptacle can be replaced with a GFCI on a non grounded circuit. See 406.4(d)(3) IMO this is safer than a 3 wire grounded system.
tom baker said:A 2 wire receptacle can be replaced with a GFCI on a non grounded circuit. See 406.4(d)(3) IMO this is safer than a 3 wire grounded system.
stickboy1375 said:Then why do we install GFI's Jim?
Jim W in Tampa said:To protect the user from shock on non grounded devices and ones where the ground went bad.GFCI do save lives but grounds are still needed on some equipment.If they where a cure all we would be back to using 2 wire receptacles and saving copper.
romeo said:I am from Ma.
The 2002 Massachusetts Electrical Code (527 CMR 12.00) of the Board of Fire Prevention Regulations shall be the 2002 National Electrical Code modified as follows:
Delete Article 80 and insert the following provisions ahead of the body of the Code:
romeo said:According to the instructor it is a violation of NEC 80.9(C) It reads in part Additions,alterations,installations or repairs shall not cause any existing buildings to become unsafe.
Rule 3. Additions or modifications to an existing installation shall be made in accordance with this Code without bringing the remaining part of the installation into compliance with the requirements of this Code. The installation shall not create a violation of this Code, nor shall it increase the magnitude of an existing violation.
iwire said:I agree with Jim here, GFCIs do not prevent shocks.
GFCIs attempt to prevent lethal shocks by limiting the duration of the shock.
racerdave3 said:I guess I question this somewhat. From what I have read through the years, a GFCI will trip at 4 miliamps (.004 amps).
The current sensing coil in the unit monitors the current flow on the hot and the neutral of the circuit. The moment it senses the imbalance (a leakage potentially causing a shock) the device will trip on a ground fault condition.
A properly functioning GFCI should trip so rapidly that not even a tingle will be felt.
racerdave3 said:Jim/Bob, I guess I question this somewhat. From what I have read through the years, a GFCI will trip at 4 miliamps (.004 amps). The current sensing coil in the unit monitors the current flow on the hot and the neutral of the circuit. The moment it senses the imbalance (a leakage potentially causing a shock) the device will trip on a ground fault condition. A properly functioning GFCI should trip so rapidly that not even a tingle will be felt. All this of course depends on proper monthly testing of the device to insure it's continued operation, which I'm sure every one of us here always do :roll: If the device does fail, then it is basically as effective as an old FPE circuit breaker.
ptonsparky said:The GFCI did trip and no doubt saved his life but my brother says "It hurt like hell!"