espiritiv
New member
- Location
- Portland, OR USA
So i have a bathroom remodel i am going to do soon. The house is built in 1970s and no work has been done on it yet. I wanted to get my scope of work together for the electrician.
The bedroom and bathroom are each on there own 15A 1P circuit breakers, but the wiring is a shared neutral. I know this was not against code back then. With the upgrade of the bathroom i need to install a GFCI circuit breaker, rather than put a GFCI receptacle as the first receptacle in the bathroom circuit. (why do this?, because my bathroom receptacle will be a USB/receptacle type.)
Here is the question: Can i put in the new GFCI breaker for bathroom, and use a tie bar to meet 210.4(b) to simultaneously disconnect when the GFCI trips? Or is it worth the time and money to pull a new set of conductors from the basement to the attic, to connect back to the bathroom circuit so that it has it own neutral wire?
The bedroom and bathroom are each on there own 15A 1P circuit breakers, but the wiring is a shared neutral. I know this was not against code back then. With the upgrade of the bathroom i need to install a GFCI circuit breaker, rather than put a GFCI receptacle as the first receptacle in the bathroom circuit. (why do this?, because my bathroom receptacle will be a USB/receptacle type.)
Here is the question: Can i put in the new GFCI breaker for bathroom, and use a tie bar to meet 210.4(b) to simultaneously disconnect when the GFCI trips? Or is it worth the time and money to pull a new set of conductors from the basement to the attic, to connect back to the bathroom circuit so that it has it own neutral wire?