Went and looked at a problem this morning that I thought I'd get everyone's take on.
Backstory: Couple bought an existing home a year ago and completely remodeled it down to the bones. New everything. After moving back in, they were plagued with breakers tripping. Last fall, they started keeping track of what tripped, and when.


Mostly, it's the GFCI breakers feeding the kitchen. My first thought was it just might be a bad batch of breakers, but apparently the original EC replaced them. My second guess is that, somehow, there's actual ground faults in the laundry, dishwasher, disposal, microwave AND gas stove. The vast majority of tripping issues seem to be the dish/disposal circuit, the microwave circuit, and the two SABCs. All five are on Siemens GFCI breakers. But the HO states that occasionally other circuits would trip.
I didn't have the time today to tear into all this and investigate much, including megging the appliances and circuits nor put an ammeter on each circuit to see what each one draws. But it seems odd that this many GFCI breakers trip so often. So I thought I'd post it here to get a passel of second opinions.
Backstory: Couple bought an existing home a year ago and completely remodeled it down to the bones. New everything. After moving back in, they were plagued with breakers tripping. Last fall, they started keeping track of what tripped, and when.


Mostly, it's the GFCI breakers feeding the kitchen. My first thought was it just might be a bad batch of breakers, but apparently the original EC replaced them. My second guess is that, somehow, there's actual ground faults in the laundry, dishwasher, disposal, microwave AND gas stove. The vast majority of tripping issues seem to be the dish/disposal circuit, the microwave circuit, and the two SABCs. All five are on Siemens GFCI breakers. But the HO states that occasionally other circuits would trip.
I didn't have the time today to tear into all this and investigate much, including megging the appliances and circuits nor put an ammeter on each circuit to see what each one draws. But it seems odd that this many GFCI breakers trip so often. So I thought I'd post it here to get a passel of second opinions.