Michael15956
Senior Member
- Location
- NE Ohio
Called to a problem with a Carrier Furnace tripping a gfci receptacle on a Ryobi portable genny. This furnace had a pigtail so that it could be connected to the line side by a receptacle or the genny with an extension cord. Line side, (house current) is not gfci protected. This is the first time the furnace was connected to the genny.
Thought there might be a neutral to ground fault and disconnect the internal grounding wires. At this point the furnace operated just fine off the genny.
Customer said that funny because other household appliances run off the genny. Though for sure it was a neutral to ground fault in the furnace but just for a test I connected the grounding wires back inside the furnace and connected it to a line side gfci receptacle. Furnace ran fine off this line side gfci receptacle!!
Have to admit that left me scratching my ass.
Anybody else ever run into this kind of problem before?
Does it matter if this furnace had a converter to provide dc current for the blower motor? This was the point where the gfci tripped on the genny, when the blower motor started, but ran fine on a household gfci receptacle.
Thought there might be a neutral to ground fault and disconnect the internal grounding wires. At this point the furnace operated just fine off the genny.
Customer said that funny because other household appliances run off the genny. Though for sure it was a neutral to ground fault in the furnace but just for a test I connected the grounding wires back inside the furnace and connected it to a line side gfci receptacle. Furnace ran fine off this line side gfci receptacle!!
Have to admit that left me scratching my ass.
Anybody else ever run into this kind of problem before?
Does it matter if this furnace had a converter to provide dc current for the blower motor? This was the point where the gfci tripped on the genny, when the blower motor started, but ran fine on a household gfci receptacle.
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