Gray has always been an acceptable grounded-conductor color.
Only after the 2002 NEC. Before that, it was a ungrounded color.
Wow..... a GFCI from the 80's!!!!!!!...
Strangely enough, I run across these every once in a while and they are still working whereas the new ones I put in seem to only last a year.
The need to lower cost, build inferior products. Keeps the financial cycle of life going for someones profit!Strangely enough, I run across these every once in a while and they are still working whereas the new ones I put in seem to only last a year.
There is another way of looking at that: Are these vintage gfcis "still protecting"/effective or are they simply "working"?
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Strangely enough, I run across these every once in a while and they are still working whereas the new ones I put in seem to only last a year.
Don't assume line and load are on same position on the device as the new one either. Though new ones should not reset if you do get it wrong.Last one of those I replaced was miswired all kinds of wrong and when I wired in the new GFCI, it locked out. those old ones will still pass power even if line and load are reversed, and I've seen them "trip" and keep downstream receptacles energized.
Just a caveat to anyone replacing GFCI that old: verify the line and load are correct, do not assume the previous ec got it right.