tbcowgirl said:According to the 1999 Code book, replacing a two prong recepticle with a GFCI recepticle is acceptable if labled GFI protected with no equipment ground. Is this code still acceptable or has it been updated?
tbcowgirl said:According to the 1999 Code book, replacing a two prong recepticle with a GFCI recepticle is acceptable if labled GFI protected with no equipment ground. Is this code still acceptable or has it been updated?
Ken, when you post you need to specify 1902, 1905, 1908, or 2002, 2005 ect.480sparky said:Hasn't changed in either the '02 , '05 or '08.
Dennis Alwon said:It is still acceptable.
chris kennedy said:Ken, when you post you need to specify 1902, 1905, 1908, or 2002, 2005 ect.
Thanks.
brother said:NOW WAIT A MINUTE, I PUT MY POST UP BEFORE DENNIS, (a few seconds before him) and he still gets his in before mine?? There must be favortism on this site.
LOL
brother said:NOW WAIT A MINUTE, I PUT MY POST UP BEFORE DENNIS, (a few seconds before him) and he still gets his in before mine?? There must be favortism on this site.
LOL
boyle78 said:when replacing the two wire receps with gfi's can you load out to other receps changed to grounded type if the e.g. is the conduit? Or do you have to change each recep with it's own gfi?
firelient said:But to my knowage the GFCI will not trip with out a ground with a gfci tester so is this really a good fix. or am I doing something wrong
How stuff works said:A GFCI monitors the amount of current flowing from hot to neutral. If there is any imbalance, it trips the circuit. It is able to sense a mismatch as small as 4 or 5 milliamps, and it can react as quickly as one-thirtieth of a second.
Dennis Alwon said:I think this is a bad fix myself esp. since the labels won't go on in most cases and will often fall off. ....
You can indeed use the feed-through terminals, but there is a catch: You are not supposed to inter-connect EGC's on GFCI-protected unbonded grounding receptacles, so the existence of the conduit would render this exception non-compliant for your use.boyle78 said:when replacing the two wire receps with gfi's can you load out to other receps changed to grounded type if the e.g. is the conduit? Or do you have to change each recep with it's own gfi?
The GFCI will not trip with a plug-in tester, because it does not have access to any grounded condcutor ahead of the current sensor. However, the built-in tester functions fine.firelient said:But to my knowage the GFCI will not trip with out a ground with a gfci tester so is this really a good fix. or am I doing something wrong
tbcowgirl said:According to the 1999 Code book, replacing a two prong recepticle with a GFCI recepticle is acceptable if labled GFI protected with no equipment ground. Is this code still acceptable or has it been updated?
boyle78 said:when replacing the two wire receps with gfi's can you load out to other receps changed to grounded type if the e.g. is the conduit? Or do you have to change each recep with it's own gfi?
Good call, Bob. You've earned your points for today.iwire said:If the job is steel conduit or tubing there is an EGC, there would be no requirement to use GFCIs for receptacle replacement.