I met the neon guy at a restaurant today where he had installed 6 tubes of neon and I was there to hook up his transformer. He told me that ALL neon transformers today are made with a built in GFI, that I had to run a dedicated GFCI circuit to his transformer, the built in GFI was too sensitive and that a GFCI breaker would trip before the transformer GFI would thus preventing the restaurant owner from having to climb above the ceiling to reset the GFI, and finally he said I had to jumper from the grounding conductor to the grounded conductor on the transformer or that the GFI would not work at all. I told him if I bonded the two conductors together that there would be current traveling on the metal case of the transformer and anything that was in contact with. He disagreed. I asked him if the GFI in the transformer is so sensitive then wont it trip long before a breaker GFI? He just said "well thats the way we been doin'em and they work fine". Well I tapped off an existing circuit that was only loaded to 4 amps, didn't install a GFCI breaker, and didn't tie the grounding and grounded conductors together. Is this what any of you would have done. I'm going back tomorrow so let me know if you think any changes need to be made. Thanks.