stew
Senior Member
- Location
- federal way,washington
can anyone tell me why we can use gfcis on shared neutrals but not afcis. ?
It will definitely not work. There is no way the two AFCI breakers can proportionately split the current between them. GFCI breakers have this same linitation.stew said:I had heard(but didnt know for sure) that if you used a shared neutral on an afci circuit like to feed 2 bedrooms with say a 14/3 and 2 afcis that the afci would trip and not function properly. am I wrong on this then I wire? it would mean of course that you would have to connect the afci load side neutrals together in the panel and then out to the load. willl or wont work?
Can someone explain how we can share neutrals with a 2-pole AFCI breaker? If one phase draws more doesn't the other pole detect an imbalance and trip?iwire said:On the load side of either device the neutrals must be dedicated if the units are single pole or if they are two pole you can share neutrals.
The GFP part of the AFCI looks at the current on the two hots and the grounded conductor. This will always sum to zero unless there is a ground fault. If the sum is 30-50 mA above zero the breaker trips.Can someone explain how we can share neutrals with a 2-pole AFCI breaker? If one phase draws more doesn't the other pole detect an imbalance and trip?
Thanks Don, now I see this working for a 240vac circuit, since the single (line-line) circuit load is balanced. Getting two seperate 120vac phases synchronized and balanced with perfect timing might be more difficult.don_resqcapt19 said:The GFP part of the AFCI looks at the current on the two hots and the grounded conductor. This will always sum to zero unless there is a ground fault.
The current that goes out on one hot returns on the other hot or the neutral. The current on all three wires must sum to zero unless there is another path. There is no need for any type of timing or synchronization.Getting two seperate 120vac phases synchronized and balanced with perfect timing might be more difficult.
Ahh, I see the breaker is comparing the neutral current to both poles summed, so the two poles can draw different currents as long as they sum the neutral current?don_resqcapt19 said:The current on all three wires must sum to zero unless there is another path.