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Any Electricians?

Old Jul 12, 2007 | 02:06 PM
  #16  
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Yeah does not suprise me they did something like that scenario.. I will pick up a new GFCI breaker and wire it correctly, and pull the regular GE 20 AMP breaker...

Hub
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Old Jul 12, 2007 | 06:12 PM
  #17  
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Got it done. Thanks for the Help!


Hub
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Old Jul 12, 2007 | 06:18 PM
  #18  
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Cool deal. Make sure to test it. If you have a shaker type tester you can put one lead on the hot and ground the other lead and the breaker should trip. It's much easier to use a gfci tester. It is just a plug that you plug in and has a series of lights that tells you if you are wired correctly. Then it has a button that you can press to trip the gfci. It has a resistor that throws the load out of balance so it trips. The gfci tester is around $10. The only drawback is that it won't test correctly unless you have a mechanical ground.
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Old Jul 12, 2007 | 06:24 PM
  #19  
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well I do not have the GFCI version but the plain version and I plugged it into the outlet and it tripped. The instructions on the tester said it would do that... I plugged a hair dryer and a vaccum cleaner into the outlet and it does not trip.

Yet another reason to love the internet...

Thanks Again!

Hub
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Old Jul 12, 2007 | 11:52 PM
  #20  
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this is exactly why this site is awesome. spunbearing, hats off to ya!
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Old Jul 15, 2007 | 03:05 AM
  #21  
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I have run into this allot in some of the Chinese built condos or remodels out here, It looks like they could not get them to work correctly so the switched the lead to a standard breaker, leaving some unsuspecting tenant to get hung up when they drop their curling iron in the sink.

I find a lot of poorly crimped Buchanan’s on the bare wires in the box, loose screws on the recieptles, usually when I have to replace the burned wiring.
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Old Jul 15, 2007 | 05:11 PM
  #22  
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Originally Posted by Jim Lane
I have run into this allot in some of the Chinese built condos or remodels out here, It looks like they could not get them to work correctly so the switched the lead to a standard breaker, leaving some unsuspecting tenant to get hung up when they drop their curling iron in the sink.

I find a lot of poorly crimped Buchanan’s on the bare wires in the box, loose screws on the recieptles, usually when I have to replace the burned wiring.
Unfortunate for the customer, but we call that job security. I haven't worked residential for years. Been heavy industrial (oil refinery) cuz it's much SAFER, and I don't have listen to the interior designers who haven't got a clue. Sorry for the thread hijack.

~Dave
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