TwoBlocked
Senior Member
- Location
- Bradford County, PA
- Occupation
- Industrial Electrician
You mean the tripped receptacle itself, or any receptacles downstream? The neutral, that is.It most certainly is disconnected on a tripped GFCI!
Try it and see.
You mean the tripped receptacle itself, or any receptacles downstream? The neutral, that is.It most certainly is disconnected on a tripped GFCI!
Try it and see.
Both. In most GFCI receptacles, the load terminals are even separated from the receptacle contacts.You mean the tripped receptacle itself, or any receptacles downstream? The neutral, that is.
It disconnects the neutral from the line side to load side, and any downstream neutral from there.You mean the tripped receptacle itself, or any receptacles downstream? The neutral, that is.
@TwoBlockedWhat? The neutral is not disconnected by a tripped GFCI.
Or do you mean if the neutral is open, the GFCI will trip?
Also, if the neutral is grounded it will trip a GFCI. Damhik...
Don't Ask Me How I Know. He wasn't calling you a darned redneck.@TwoBlocked
What exactly did you mean by the bolded part above?
Never heard that before! LOL!Don't Ask Me How I Know. He wasn't calling you a darned redneck.
Permissible when ungrounded line(s) simultaneously opened.I never considered it opening a neutral is such a no-no.
