How Many Ground Fault Circuit Interrupters On One Breaker

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Why Not DIY

Why Not DIY

3 жыл бұрын

In this video I will show you how many ground fault circuit interrupters ( GFCI ) you can have on one circuit. I have been asked this question numerous times and now I feel like it shoudl be addressed. I am using 2 20 amp GFCI's in this demonstration. Any questions please feel free to shoot me a message.
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Пікірлер: 620
@thenite187
@thenite187 3 жыл бұрын
Okay, this is a bit confusing because there are some tests left out of this video (like testing the plug side while power is reaching the lug side of the brown CFGI or "child receptacle"). First of all, let's assign some names to the GFCI's in question. We'll refer to the first GFCI (white/off white) as the "parent" and the second (brown), third, fourth, ect... GFCI's as the child/ren. - outlets hooked up in series (connected to the bottom lugs of the GFCI outlet). To simplify this, do not/never hook up GFCI's in series. Only connect them in parallel as if they are independent from other GFCI's on the same circuit. Voltage drop from one GFCI/GFI to another will prevent children from resetting. You only need one CGFI for child outlets ran in "Series" (using the bottom lugs on the parent GFCI to connect child outlets - being mindful of how many outlets you can run on one circuit by code). GFCI should be able to trip with a short (grounded circuit) upstream and downstream, which trips the auto-shutoff feature of the receptacle/s (all the GFCIs on the same circuit should trip). The confusing part is that nowhere in the video does it show a reset of the child (brown) GFCI after the parent was tripped (indicating a voltage drop preventing the child GFCI from resetting or it wasn't manually reset until later, which we did not see), resetting the child GFCI should correct the power-flow to the plug-side/s of the all the children receptacles. So, as elementary as the GFCI function is, as long as there is power fed through the receptacle both the parent GFCI and theoretically the series GFCI receptacles have been manually reset, the power should flow through to the plug side of the parent and child/ren GFCI's (unless there isn't enough power to the GFCI in order to reset it/them). Problem again is, there's a voltage drop that keeps child CFGI's from resetting. The point is,, you do not need multiple GFCI's as long as you connect standard outlets in series to the parent GFCI outlet using the first method demonstrated in this video. It is not recommended to use this method to series GFCI's outlets (if it happened to work at all) because when one GFCI trips, they all should respectively trip and making it difficult to isolate where a short might be occurring (which will leave you and even a professional electrician with the proverbial head-scratch wondering why someone would subject themselves or anyone to that mess). It is wiser to choose whether or not to provide direct power (wiring in parallel to each receptacle, isolating GFCIs and with or without child outlets) or simply installing one GFCI that controls all following child outlets in series (connected to the bottom lugs of the GFCI). - Do not add GFCI's in series, meaning a parent GFCI controlling GFCI/s downstream, that's just being a jerk and causing you the headache of having to reset all dependent GFCI's, if they work at all, in the event one becomes tripped. Rely on one GFCI to control multiple child outlets or provide direct power to each GFCI independently on the same circuit.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 3 жыл бұрын
Wow that's an awesome comment thank you for writing this. Have a great day ☺
@jban4457
@jban4457 2 жыл бұрын
In order to run a "series", couldn't you just figure out the formula-for-resistance-loss for every "child" outlet, then check the specs on the gfci for the required ohms? (I'm thinking one or two "child" outlets would operate properly but that's purely a common-sense guess.)
@MP-zf7kg
@MP-zf7kg 2 жыл бұрын
@@jban4457 Problem is the unpredictability of load.
@MP-zf7kg
@MP-zf7kg 2 жыл бұрын
This is a great comment and far better than the video. What's really a kicker is to "map" a circuit correctly, including light fixtures.
@keithharrington4595
@keithharrington4595 2 жыл бұрын
@@jban4457 the use of "series" and "parallel" with gfci's can be confusing. Gfci's simply check for a current imbalance and trip. We connect up 120vac to the GFCI input (line) and it protects that outlet. There are terminals (load) to allow the GFCI to essentially be the protected power source for recepticles connected down stream, giving them GFCI protection. Running power through the GFCI like that can been refered to as "series" because power runs through it, however, it passes power through like a breaker (120vac) to the parallel connected down stream recepticles. If you need GFCI protection in two spots, you can "T" tap or pigtail or parallel connect two gfci's On the (line) side to have GFCI protection and a GFCI in each location. Gfci's do not play well with one another when one feeds the other.
@takeniteasyfriend
@takeniteasyfriend Жыл бұрын
BLUF: Multiple GFCI receptacles on the same circuit must be wired electrically in parallel vs serially. Great 👍 hands on demonstration
@EsqChrio
@EsqChrio Жыл бұрын
I have an old house that has both bathroom wall outlets on the same circuit. I changed out both today with GFCI outlets and spent several hours trying to figure out why the second one would not work. Stumbled across this video and resolved the problem in a minute. Thanks for the video. It was a big help.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Awesome so glad that you found my video. I appreciate you watching and commenting ☺
@glasshalffull2930
@glasshalffull2930 Жыл бұрын
You wasted time and money. A circuit only needs one GFCI and it should be on the receptacle closest to the breaker panel. The GFCI installed this way protects all outlets downstream.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
That's great in a perfect world, most homes are not wired like they should be
@rw5838
@rw5838 Жыл бұрын
Greetings, Sir! I think I have the answer to your question as to "why" this works (correct me if I am wrong). We know that an A/C circuit is a parallel circuit. SO, in order to make the 2nd GFCI independent of the first one, we have to wire the UNgrounded Conductors "in parallel with" the TRUE source (the circuit breaker). By wiring the ungrounded conductors in parallel with the BREAKER, we allow current to flow to each receptacle at all times INDEPENDENTLY OF the upstream GFCI. I think this would be more evident into the viewers if you had used a pigtail, because it would show that the current is "dropped off" at the 1st GFCI receptacle AND it continues to the 2nd one simultaneously. This reminds me: I need to make this correction on my own house tomorrow from when I was an apprentice. Thank you for your excellent videos! If someone already commented on this, I apologize!
@brettfoster6786
@brettfoster6786 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks buddy, I’m rewiring a old house and I’m keeping your videos handy. A big thumbs up 👍
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate it good luck. Thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@bb55555555
@bb55555555 5 ай бұрын
that is absolutely correct. I found that out the hard way when I was installing these in my kitchen renovation.
@josephcarreoniii6434
@josephcarreoniii6434 Жыл бұрын
I really liked your explanation. I needed this because I have to change out a regular receptacle to a a GFI on the other side of our kitchen sink. So, in other words there will be two GFI breakers on each side of the kitchen sink for safety sake. Keep up the good work!!
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@LuminusMarley
@LuminusMarley 11 ай бұрын
I can’t express my gratitude enough! This was driving me crazy…I have one gfci line running to 2 bathrooms and I couldn’t get the new outlets to work in the second bathroom! Problem solved! 😅🙏
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 11 ай бұрын
Awesome!! Glad that this helped you. Have a great day ☺
@ericsmith5104
@ericsmith5104 Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Home inspector said I had to put a GFCI on the outside [under porch] but no one realized it was daisy chained from the GFCI in the kitchen. Was having this very problem and this just fixed it.
@apackwestbound5946
@apackwestbound5946 Жыл бұрын
Nice catch and discovery! May I make a suggestion that you label the outlet/receptacle that is outside and under the porch saying that it is GFI/GFCI current protected. Most GFI/GFCI have several small peel off and use labels included in the packet/box the GFI/GFCI comes in that are designed for this. All outlets/receptacles that are downstream, connected to the "load" side of the GFI/GFCI should be labeled as GFI/GFCI protected.
@slbreeze1
@slbreeze1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you thank you for this video! I had it wired right but ended up with no bathroom fans, lights or outlet juice in two bathrooms. Made no sense until I finally found this gem advice, It worked! Now if I can just get the broken bottom screw out of the box housing, it'll look nice too. :)
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Glad to hear that this helped you ☺
@Mad_ghalley88
@Mad_ghalley88 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks. I am doing my own basement and I had to put 3 gfci in the kitchen counter and I was having the same issue. I did it they way u showed in this vedio it worked. Thank.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 3 жыл бұрын
Awesome thanks for watching and commenting
@andresmendez7800
@andresmendez7800 Жыл бұрын
I’m a third year apprentice and even this video made more sense then some of these electricians on this job site !! Thanks 🤙
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Awesome glad to hear that this helped you. Sometimes people tend to over complicate things. Have a great day ☺
@daniel.j.rauscher
@daniel.j.rauscher Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video. I’m a DIY-er getting ready to install several receptacles around my outdoor patio, so will have several GFCIs on one circuit. Basically, looks like pigtailing them / wiring in parallel is the only way to go.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
I agree. Or you can put in regular receps and come off the load side. All depends on what you want to spend and the look your aiming for
@billm.8220
@billm.8220 Жыл бұрын
Definitely good to know. Doubt I will ever need to put 2 GFIs on the same circuit but great knowledge to have for future reference.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the comment and watching ☺
@denniskazich7559
@denniskazich7559 2 жыл бұрын
You are an excellent instructor. I've done this several years ago. It always worked fine so I feel confident. Although I'm going to take off the cover tomorrow and recheck it lol. It's in metal box and mounted on the block wall.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your kind words. Thanks for the comment and watching ☺
@salfitimina2376
@salfitimina2376 Жыл бұрын
I've replaced many kitchen GFCIs, just using the existing wire method they used ( Line in load out) and have never had a problem. Tested all and theu all worked corr8
@darrenwarren8636
@darrenwarren8636 4 ай бұрын
Thank - you, solved a problem that has been driving me crazy for months
@richardbatters
@richardbatters 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. It makes perfect sense if you understand LINE & LOAD. But I understand the confusion.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@charlesbernius8065
@charlesbernius8065 Жыл бұрын
Good video Brother. Just retired out of IBEW Local 130. I can’t explain it either but you are correct, it doesn’t work if you use the load side to feed another GFCI.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Amen and congratulations on your retirement.. I can't wait
@rickl6697
@rickl6697 Жыл бұрын
The reason I want to do this is, I have two sump pumps in my yard that I want to run off of one 20 amp circuit with a regular breaker. I want the sump pumps independent of each other so if one trips their GFCI outlet it won't shut down the other sump pump when there is no problem with that pump. Thanks for posting this and explaining. I'll be wiring them so they are in parallel with each having their own ground, neutral and hot.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Good luck and thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@CT9905.
@CT9905. Жыл бұрын
I wired my GFCI’s the Wrong way and now I know how to correct the problem.
@Kilrbbbs
@Kilrbbbs 2 жыл бұрын
After scratch my head for an hour and wiring it the wrong way, I watch your video and problem solved. Thank you for the mock up walk through.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
So glad to hear this thanks for watching and commenting.
@actionjksn
@actionjksn Жыл бұрын
Why did you put multiple GFCIs on a single circuit?
@Kilrbbbs
@Kilrbbbs Жыл бұрын
@@actionjksn no particular safety reason. I just bought two…..Legrand radiant Night Light, Self-Test GFCI Outlets, Safe for Kids, Tamper Resistant, Brushed Nickel, 15 Amp, 1597NTLTRNICC4 on Amazon because I like the metal look. Afterwards I needed this video to figure out how to wire one GFI to another.
@marklashway
@marklashway Жыл бұрын
Wow we have this problem at our marina for about five boats. I’m going to look into this thank you very much.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@abel2santiago
@abel2santiago 2 ай бұрын
So ilustrative. Thankyou so much!!!🎉🎉
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Ай бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@ktm42080
@ktm42080 Жыл бұрын
Great video! I'm currently rewiring my kitchen, gonna have (I know, I know) 3 GFIs on a 20 amp circuit. There will be no other load on that circuit, just multiple outlet options, house was built before electricity. Two will be joined in a junction box and the third will tail off the last GFI, now I know how to do it without getting confused. Thanks!
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Nothing wrong with that many gfcis it's all preference. I appreciate you watching and commenting ☺
@nadajoey1
@nadajoey1 7 ай бұрын
Great video. Very helpful.
@gregrichard9192
@gregrichard9192 2 жыл бұрын
I've learned something watching this video. Great job
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you I appreciate it alot and glad to hear that you learned from this. Have a great day ☺
@mmhodler5753
@mmhodler5753 13 күн бұрын
A great tutorial. thanks
@chopnchannel
@chopnchannel 2 жыл бұрын
You’re a life saver! Thank you
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@user-ur4nm2sb3q
@user-ur4nm2sb3q 2 ай бұрын
Very informative, thank you
@thomasreedy4751
@thomasreedy4751 12 күн бұрын
Did you try to reset both GCFI outlets when connected in serial? Another KZbinr showed it is possible to have multiple GCFIs connected but highly confusing because the user has to figure out where the fault originated and reset all subsequent connections. Thus not code.
@JuanCastillo-zm2wq
@JuanCastillo-zm2wq 2 жыл бұрын
You just solved my problem. Thank you so much
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
My pleasure glad to hear that this helped you.
@jacenas
@jacenas 10 ай бұрын
Lol, I have been going at it for 2 days on an outdoor project, powering an outdoor kitchen and outlet in the garden which we think should be gfi. This vid will allow me to redeem myself
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 9 ай бұрын
Definitely outdoors gfci.
@JDRedNation
@JDRedNation 2 жыл бұрын
Dropping by to say this video helped me tremendously! Thanks
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
That's awesome so glad that this helped you ☺
@castawaysmc
@castawaysmc Жыл бұрын
well I'm glad I accidentally run across this video. I recently made a few pigtail GFCI boxes to use on my string of drop cords on the job site so that I don't have to deal with running all the way back to the house. also many customers don't have a GFCI outlet outside their house so when it trips I have no power until I catch them at home in the evening. it really sucks when they are out of town. Anyway, I did it the wrong way and kept running back and forth chasing tripped outlets forever. I couldn't understand what was happening. THANKS
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Awesome and it's my pleasure. I appreciate you watching and commenting ☺
@larryprice6321
@larryprice6321 3 ай бұрын
Thanks I really needed this for my job I'm on
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 3 ай бұрын
So glad that this helped you ☺
@futuregamer5791
@futuregamer5791 2 жыл бұрын
Or you can wire the neutrals together and the hots. Then pig tail off of them to the first gfci
@martingonzalez529
@martingonzalez529 3 жыл бұрын
Excellent information, well done 👍👍👍👍
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks ☺
@bryanburt1
@bryanburt1 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome video..Great job Mountaineer Outdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks I appreciate it ☺
@m2.tv.r
@m2.tv.r 4 ай бұрын
Thank you it helps me so much
@philly444fan3
@philly444fan3 Жыл бұрын
I like your video/s and I know you're trying to help people. Let me also say that I'm not disagreeing with you, esp since I've seen your theory of wiring multiple GFCIs on 1 circuit used on other websites/searches. Only problem I have (which might be where a lot of people get confused) is if you look at the instructions that come in the box of a new GFCI, there's a diagram showing the correct way (or the manufacturers suggested way) to wire multiple GCFIs to 1 circuit is to take feed wires from breaker (panel) to line side of 1st GFCI, connect load (branch circuit/downstream) wires to load side of 1st GFCI, then connect those wires to line side of 2nd GFCI and repeat that process for however many GFCIs you are installing on that circuit. In other words go line to load, line to load, line to load etc. I have pictures of instructions from a brand new Eaton GFCI that illustrate this, however I can't add photos to this comment (or at least I can't figure out how to add the photos). Not sure where this leaves us, but I wanted to point out what the manufacturer (in my case Easton) suggests as to the correct way to wire multiple GFCIs on 1 circuit.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Yep. Nothing wrong with I always say follow the manufacturer diagram. That just keeps it alot more simple for some. Great comment. Have a great day ☺
@rafa031993
@rafa031993 3 жыл бұрын
You're the best thank for your good explanation
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 3 жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@ebo2584
@ebo2584 Жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation very clear thank you 👍
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@gregriley649
@gregriley649 3 жыл бұрын
Awesome video thanks for sharing 👍
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 3 жыл бұрын
My pleasure.. ☺
@oscarsanta7986
@oscarsanta7986 3 жыл бұрын
Excelente información muchas gracias 👍
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 3 жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@magabwoy84
@magabwoy84 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much..this was very helpful
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@r4ptorbunny593
@r4ptorbunny593 7 ай бұрын
The previous owner of my house wired up multiple GFCI outlets in series/chains in this house. I think the reason mine work and yours didn't is because mine are ungrounded. It's always fun when the 3rd or 4th receptacle doesn't have power and I have to check every one from the panel to the problem outlet to see which one tripped.
@RicardoHernandez-fv5bv
@RicardoHernandez-fv5bv 2 жыл бұрын
Old this helped a lot I was stuck and this saved my brain from crashing
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome glad to hear that this helped you out. Thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@deandregraden4382
@deandregraden4382 4 күн бұрын
Thank you this worked perfectly
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 күн бұрын
Awesome thank you for your comment and watching ☺
@joseluisruiz3789
@joseluisruiz3789 2 жыл бұрын
Your video was very helpful thank you so much for taking the time to make it. I have regular 15 Amp outlets in my basement with a 20 Amp Circuit breaker and want to switch them to(WR) Weather Resistant 20 Amp GFCI Outlets and found this very helpful. I rent the house I live in "built in 1920" and all the Outlets where old and most of them we lose from the plug area and when I replaced them I noticed all of them were 15 amps. When I checked the circuit breaker box outside the house I seen that all the breakers are 20 amps using 12 Gauge Copper wiring except the Air Conditioning Breakers, those were 2 x 50 Amp Outlets and the main power breaker that shuts everything down is 2 x 100 Amp Breakers. I will definitely buy these off your affiliated link. It's the least I can do to support the channel. Thanks again for help me as a DWYER, my landlords don't fix anything so I do all the work my self. 🙏🙇‍♂️
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
That sucks about your landlord. I appreciate you watching and commenting and supporting my channel. I hope everything gets fixed for you. Take care and good luck
@keithharrington4595
@keithharrington4595 2 жыл бұрын
Read those instruction for those gfci's carefully. They do not play well together when one feeds another. You can have one GFCI feed several or use pigtails to attach power to the "line side".
@surferdude642
@surferdude642 2 жыл бұрын
It's totally acceptable to use 15 amp duplex receptacles or gfci's on a 20 amp circuit. You shouldn't use 20 amp receptacles on a 15 amp circuit.
@tycoonz0619
@tycoonz0619 2 жыл бұрын
Nice video, really helpful
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your comment and watching ☺
@danchandler9381
@danchandler9381 9 ай бұрын
Some hair dryers have a GFCI built into the cord. WHen I plug a hair dryer like that into a wall-mounted GFCI, it works fine. This means (at least in this case) that there is no problem with putting GFCIs in series. Is there something unique about the case I describe here that allows GFCIs to be wired in series?
@GuitarsCarsandBikes
@GuitarsCarsandBikes 2 ай бұрын
Good video , even with basic electrical knowledge it makes no sense why they can’t daisy chain power. But now I’m a believer.
@earthenergyhex
@earthenergyhex 2 жыл бұрын
thanks for this, I was connecting 2 sheds so I have 2 GFI's and it wouldn't work. now I know why, I'm gonna go fix it.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@g.jeffreypowell270
@g.jeffreypowell270 Жыл бұрын
Great videos Thank you
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@CK-gd6mz
@CK-gd6mz Жыл бұрын
I experienced the exact same issue and I was completely stumped. I took everything apart and double checked everything again. Same exact issue. I used a screwdriver and depressed the reset on both GFCI until I heard a loud "CLICK". The first way, the wrong way actually works. You just need to reset both GFCI.
@actionjksn
@actionjksn Жыл бұрын
You're not supposed to put multiple GFCIs on one circuit, you put one single GFCI on the first one in the series and then it will protect all of the other outlets. That is nothing but a big waste of money putting multiples on one circuit.
@tomhanwayescape
@tomhanwayescape Жыл бұрын
with the "wrong" way, if the parent one trips so will the second or third etc. I have a parent GFCI in a bathroom inside a rental studio and three other receptacles downstream off that GFCI. So if it trips in the rental bathroom all the other ones go to. The other ones are in a second studio or outside plugs. If the parent one trips, my second rental has no power in the kitchen and I have to get permission from the renter to go inside and fix it, which can take hours. So I am changing the wiring on the parent receptacle the "right" way, so each GFCI is independent from the others. hope that makes sense. '
@tomhanwayescape
@tomhanwayescape Жыл бұрын
@@actionjksn unless you want them to work indepently, like if one is in unit and another is in a second unit
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
It does good luck and it will help out alot
@frankrhodes5689
@frankrhodes5689 2 жыл бұрын
Solved my issue also. Thanks for this :)
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@sigcrazy7
@sigcrazy7 Жыл бұрын
There is a valid reason to have multiple GFIs pigtailed on the same circuit. You may wish to have your GFCI protection local to the room. For example, a single circuit can service countertop receptacles in multiple bathrooms. Perhaps you want each bathroom to have its own GFCI receptacle so a trip doesn’t require a person to go to another bathroom to reset the tripped receptacle.
@ibizanlove
@ibizanlove Жыл бұрын
If wiring GFCIs for multiple bathrooms (that are on the same circuit), would all the connected GFCI receptacles (including the initial one closest to the panel and all downstream GFCIs) need to be wired only on their line sides? Does this setup change if there's a standard receptacle somewhere in that circuit?
@sigcrazy7
@sigcrazy7 Жыл бұрын
@@ibizanlove Yes, line side only. Or you can use some 12-3 between the receptacles of the first bathroom to pass current around the GFCI of the first bathroom, or splice at the outlet where the first GFCI will reside, and take power to the second room from there, while using the load side of the first GFCI to protect the rest of the receptacles in that bathroom. Many different ways to do it.
@georgeryan9139
@georgeryan9139 Жыл бұрын
Run a few regular outlets from your one gfi. Note, the gfi is the first outlet on the circuit, use them in bathroom, kitchen, basement, garage and out door outlets or use ark and combo circuit breakers (new code).
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Yep exactly thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@elias2024
@elias2024 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, it is helpful!
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@AdanValue
@AdanValue 10 ай бұрын
I am a 2yr apprentice and recently ran into an issue. A main line from the Box was brought into a GFCI line/load (#1) in a bathroom, hopped over to another GCFI (#2) line/load, up to a light fixture, then over to a single pole switch. Best recommendations of fixing this issue??
@sammysleeves33
@sammysleeves33 2 жыл бұрын
My one bathroom doesn't have an outlet. I was thinking about maybe putting one in, wiring it to the GFCI on the adjacent wall in another bathroom. Now I know how! 😁
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome glad to hear that this helped you. Good luck 🤞
@VideoByPatrick
@VideoByPatrick 7 күн бұрын
Great info....
@peteflores5266
@peteflores5266 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the tip!
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@johnc7883
@johnc7883 6 ай бұрын
Have a outdoor lamp post, front porch and back deck that I want on the same circuit. The all in one outdoor in use covers from the big box store already come with the GFCI so I am using both. soooooo. Outside lamp post runs to front porch GFCI and gets connected to load. The front porch and back deck both go to line yea? I know its dumb but its a visual thing for a future homeowner to see the GFCI versus guessing
@Troy-McClure81
@Troy-McClure81 Жыл бұрын
Lol my House 1989 Build is so poorly wired the only 2 Gfci in my 2 story home is one in garage and one in kitchen..the kitchen was 15A on 20a circuit and wasn't even working,builder did it all backstabbed every outlet and switch,ground wires plastered instead of connected, i pray it doesn't burn down till we have the money for a pro to run through the whole system.Great explaining on wiring .
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Yea I would definitely get this looked into as soon as you can. Good luck and thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@Troy-McClure81
@Troy-McClure81 Жыл бұрын
@@MountaineerOutdoors Ya its matter of what the tax return will cover this year,just to change the 7 outlets in my kitchen had to turn off 5 breakers lol
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Wow that's weird
@Troy-McClure81
@Troy-McClure81 Жыл бұрын
@@MountaineerOutdoors ya one outlet on a wall was tied into the living room breaker,one outlet the one the big lights plug into the ceiling was another,the fridge stove and 2 outlet next to stove another,the Gfci another,and of course Dishwasher and disposal on a dedicated 20amp lol To turn off the one outlet in my backyard and the 4 in garage I have to turn off a breaker marked Gfi ,which also my low voltage is tied into I.E. my house number and doorbell lol
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
I c that makes sense now.
@joev467
@joev467 Жыл бұрын
Good video! Nice job!...Series circuit versus Parallel circuit
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
I appreciate it, I'm assuming when you say series versus parallel you would like to see a video on it?
@johnblouch3309
@johnblouch3309 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much... With you video, I confirmed I am doing it correctly........... Thank you again...
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@AJDIYNetwork
@AJDIYNetwork Жыл бұрын
Subscribed. Great vid dude!
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
I appreciate it and welcome to the mountaineer outdoors family
@c182SkylaneRG
@c182SkylaneRG 2 жыл бұрын
I've got a different, but related, question: I extended an outdoor outlet circuit underground to power a shed. I put a GFCI Circuit Breaker onto the circuit rather than dealing with changing the outlet cover to accept a GFCI outlet from the existing standard outlet, but as soon as I got the underground wire hooked up (18 ft from house to shed, plus another 10 or so ft along the house and inside to the panel), the breaker inside would immediately trip, regardless of how perfect I made the wiring. When I replaced it with a standard breaker, now it works perfectly. Any idea what's going on? Why a GFCI breaker keeps tripping on an underground wire?
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
Is your conduit full of water? Is your nuetrals touching your ground wires? Is your gfci breaker hooked u correctly? Nuetral from circuit on breakers not the nuetral bar?
@c182SkylaneRG
@c182SkylaneRG 2 жыл бұрын
@@MountaineerOutdoors I bought liquid tight flexible non-metallic conduit which is one single piece from junction box on the side of the house to junction box inside of the shed (it goes in through the shed floor to prevent water ingress). I used direct-burial rated 12-gage romex (solid plastic all the way through instead of paper) which also makes a non-stop run from junction box to junction box at each end. I can't say for 100% certain that there's no water in the line, because I laid the line a day or two before I ran the wire through it, but I did make sure the openings were pointed down, or otherwise sheltered inside the shed. I know the junction box doesn't get rained on because my eaves are 22" not including the gutters on a 1-story house, and the box is 3 ft above grade. As for the circuit breaker, itself, it was definitely wired correctly because it predates the underground extension by a year or two with no issues.
@REGDORTNARG
@REGDORTNARG Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Always my pleasure ☺
@danielharms5776
@danielharms5776 2 жыл бұрын
I Want to thank you for your outstanding video instructions on your explanation on circuity! Ive watched many videos on circuity and your instructions helped me understand it and complete my wiring correctly! Thank you very Much!
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
So glad to hear that. I appreciate you watching and commenting and making these videos is definitely my pleasure. Have a great day ☺
@michaelbrooks133
@michaelbrooks133 Жыл бұрын
Personally I Would Use A Single GFCI (First From Breaker) And Protect Subsequent Standard Receptacles/Outlets From There. Easier And Less Expensive.
@fotospatinaje
@fotospatinaje 3 жыл бұрын
Great video 👍🏻🙏👏👏
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you ☺ I appreciate your comment and watching ☺
@tonymendes6743
@tonymendes6743 Ай бұрын
Thanks. Great video. How close can you install a GFCI PLUG to a shower or a sink in the bathroom.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Ай бұрын
?
@BigmoRivera
@BigmoRivera Жыл бұрын
Nicely Done 😉👍🏽⚡️
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Thanks ☺
@brentyoungmann2732
@brentyoungmann2732 Жыл бұрын
I have a ground fault plug that has a green light on one side and has a red light on the side which is red and is blinks intermittently. Seems to be working without any problems just do not understand about the blinking red light?
@McmM-cv9sb
@McmM-cv9sb 2 жыл бұрын
That was great thanks👍
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
My pleasure thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@kevindick7485
@kevindick7485 Жыл бұрын
Thanks . When doing the hots would you use a Wago connector instead of a wire nut ?
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
I absolutely do not like wagos in the least. I have seen them fail. That's just my opinion. Can't ever go wrong with twisting your wires and an old fashioned wire nut.
@MarcosElMalo2
@MarcosElMalo2 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! This is a good explanation and tutorial. This is long and about crazy electrical work in Mexico. Read on if you want to laugh and be frightened at the same time. I’m a gringo living in an apartment in Mexico. I don’t even know where to begin! In the U.S., where we have codes and shit, I was able to troubleshoot and repair electrical issues, confident that there was a basic logic based on county and national building codes. I was even able to add new circuits/circuit breakers when I needed a separate circuit for the computer room or when I set up a 220 circuit for welding. The building is between 15 and 20 years old, built by my landlord and one of his sons. I’ve been living here for nearly 10 years. It’s 2Br/1 bath/kitchen/living room, and a rooftop patio. The building is 2 second floor apartments and one commercial space on the first floor. I believe that the landlord and the son did the electrical themselves or didn’t hire a competent electrician. Also, as is common, the electrical service is split between the two apartments-meaning that each apartment gets one of the phases at our meters. My neighbor gets 120v of one hot leg, and I get the other 120. There is a single 30 amp breaker at my service panel!! All the outlets and overhead lighting are fed from a single 30 amp breaker! The house is brick construction and the wiring is buried in the walls. I’m not entirely sure if everything is wired in series or if it’s branched. If branched, the first splice is buried somewhere in the walls. Am I making sense? Also, there was no ground. One of the first things I did was to drill a hole in the foundation and hammer a 4’ copper pole into the ground. (My service panel is by the front door on the first floor.) This is so I could add two new grounded outlets to the living room for the TV and computer. I added new wire (romex 12 gauge) from the breaker-basically another splice, but at the breaker/service panel. Yeah, I know, not kosher! In the U.S., I would have added a new breaker at the panel. Here, there is no room for a second breaker on the panel. I guess at some point I might upgrade the panel or even upgrade the service to 100 amps. I hesitate because this is a rental, but I’ve been here 10 years. I’m doing a kitchen remodel and I want to replace the the outlet by the sink with a GFCI. The grounding issue is complicated. Here’s what I’ve done: the water pipes were not grounded as they’re fed from a big water tank on the roof. I’ve run a ground wire from the copper grounding pole to the water pipes. Under the kitchen sink I’ve attached a ground wire. It’s currently attached to the previous outlet (the wire is surface mounted in a plastic cable channel). I plan to add more outlets upstream. I know full well that what Im doing would not be allowed by the NEC in the U.S. I’m just trying to make my apartment safer, without going to the expense of completely redoing the electrical. Maybe I should move, but $186/month is strong motivation to stay. The plan is to do a little bit to improve the situation each month. Oh, and I haven’t even mentioned the situation with the back bedroom. It shouldn’t be too hard to solve when I get around to it: there is a open neutral somewhere. I just use the room for storage anyway. One ceiling light and one outlet function properly. But I also dread opening a can of worms and discovering the problem is more complicated than I hoped. Anyway, that’s my ongoing crazy Mexican wiring story. Also, I think this experience has cured me of my libertarian tendencies.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
Wow that is alot of problems. Good for you though to try to make it safer. I understand that rent is super low. I have only in my whole electrical career seen first hand one service that was 120volts. I have heard about it before but to actually see it was something else. If you keep upgrading I'd tell him to make sure he takes it off the rent. Good luck 🤞
@busterhikney6936
@busterhikney6936 2 жыл бұрын
Wait till you see conduit made from garden hose
@a..d5518
@a..d5518 Жыл бұрын
@@busterhikney6936 Wait, that's not legal/smart/safe?? 🤣
@eddierome4016
@eddierome4016 2 жыл бұрын
Hi friend, thanks for this video but I have a question, I did the wrong way like you show in the video but I still have power on both gfci. I want to show you how I have everything connected. From the breaker I have the 1st gfci, then 2nd gfci then three regular outlets. On one of those regular outlets , my refrigerator is plugged. Every gfci and regular outlets have power but this is the problem- after 3to 4 hours the first gfci triggers and shut down all please can you help me with this problem? Thanks
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
First of all how do you have the gfcis wired? Then we can try to go on from here
@morokeiboethia6749
@morokeiboethia6749 Жыл бұрын
Does that same thing happen when you wire other AFCI outlets downstream/Load from an existing AFCI outlet? I saw a vid that this home inspector did about this same topic and in the example he had 4 GFCI outlets wired downstream from the load terminal of the first GFCI outlet on the circuit. To get all of them back online you have to reset them in the order they are beginning with the first GFCI from the breaker.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Great question. I will be completely honest with you. I have never ever installed a arc fault receptacle ever so I cannot answer this correctly.
@user-jv3ry8ob2m
@user-jv3ry8ob2m 4 ай бұрын
Are you saying that you cannot have any wires connected to the load side of the first/parent GFCI outlet? I have a problem. One GFCI outltet running garage door openers, outside landscape lighting, and two curb lights at the end of my driveway. Openers and landscape lighting is fine, but there is something shorting out at the driveway lights that I cannot find (about a 100 ft, run buried cable). When it rains heavily, and only then, the GFCI trips takind down everything. If I disconnect power from driveway lights, everything is fine. So in my mind I thought I would use two GFCI outlets, but thought of the first one having the garage openers and landscape lighting connected to the load of the parent GFCI outlets, and connecting only the driveway lights to the load side of the second/child GFCI such that in my mind I still would have openers and landscape lights running if driveway lights short out somewhere and hopefully trip only the child GFCI. I have the impression that this approach will not work, correct? Cannot seem to fix this problem.
@KevinCoop1
@KevinCoop1 2 жыл бұрын
The answer you gave at first was wrong even if you included that they all had to be connected to the line side. 1. In dwelling units, you can put as many on one circuit as you want. Dwellings are required to have a certain number of circuits based on square footages. And minimum spacing of 6’ from openings and 12’ center to center. Strictly by NEC, you can put one every 6” along your walls and connect them to the correct number of circuits. 2. Non dwelling occupancies. Receptacles are to be considered as 180 watts or 1.5 amperes per yoke of the receptacles, and are also considered non continuous load. So, 20 amp 120 volt circuit can have 13 receptacles maximum, and 15 amp circuit can have 10. 20/1.5=13.3. 15/1.5=10.
@AmericanOne9621
@AmericanOne9621 Жыл бұрын
I was wondering how far I'd have to scroll to see this.... 😂...
@AmericanOne9621
@AmericanOne9621 Жыл бұрын
No harm meant...
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Oh I completely understand. I'm pretty thick skinned. I appreciate you watching and commenting for sure. Have a great upcoming labor day
@AmericanOne9621
@AmericanOne9621 Жыл бұрын
@@MountaineerOutdoors You to my friend...
@ArturoGarzaID
@ArturoGarzaID 2 жыл бұрын
Great vid man.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate it alot ☺
@illtry4667
@illtry4667 2 жыл бұрын
After running a line in a GFCI and running a load out to a standard receptacle, do you pigtail other receptacles after that or utilize all 4 screws?
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
So you can do it how you want... Me I would pig tail them
@wizard3z868
@wizard3z868 2 жыл бұрын
I would say depends on your ahj. I don't find a difference using screw terms over pigtailing
@keithharrington4595
@keithharrington4595 2 жыл бұрын
Either are legal. I prefer pigtailing. Failure of one recepticle will only stop that one from working. If you use the device as a conductor, its failure stops all the others from working.....think string of christmas lights.
@wizard3z868
@wizard3z868 2 жыл бұрын
@@keithharrington4595 you ever look at how screw terms are bridged its not like a thin filament as a bulb they are bridged by like no 6 copper wire lol
@keithharrington4595
@keithharrington4595 2 жыл бұрын
@@wizard3z868 my experience tells me that many people hook them up as you suggest, it is legal. I have spent hours hunting through houses to find "the one" that hand a high resistance connection ,(even just the plug connection) that overheated and caused 5 or 6 more to stop working.
@lydiariley2629
@lydiariley2629 17 күн бұрын
@WhynotDIY Hello, I have an old house and from research it looks like I can "upgrade" two pronged outlets to three pronged outlets using a GFCI outlet. From what I can tell, it is "safer" to do it this way. Here is my question: I have 4 wires in each box, 2 black (hot), and two white (neutral). The first GFCI install went off without a hitch, but the next 3 (they desperately needed replaced) would not reset after tripping. **Are your instructions in video still applicable if my house is wired the I mentioned above?**
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 5 күн бұрын
Are they all wired to the line side?
@VideoByPatrick
@VideoByPatrick Жыл бұрын
Question: what if the breaker pan has gfi breaker, does that mean all same leg molex wires stay on line lugs and never load lugs ? Many thanks for your video. When should you use the load lugs of gfi outlets ?
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
If you have gfci breakers. You won't need gfcis at the receptacle boxes. The only times that you use load is when you are trying to make another recep that is non gfci make it protected by the gfci
@Hunter__14
@Hunter__14 Жыл бұрын
Sweet video, question for ya, im ginna wire up my shed and was planning on one GFCI from the panel 3 regular recepts and the end of line being a recept located outside the shed, and was gonna put a GFCI on that, question is, would i hook it up like u just showed ? Bit confused . Will the recpts after the first GFCI be protected? If wired up this way? Thanks in advance....
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
Only if you out the downstream on load side.
@jonhansen4745
@jonhansen4745 Жыл бұрын
If the 3 regular receptacles are wired to the load side of the GFCI, they are protected. If that's the case, you can then wire the outside receptacle out of any one of the 3 regular outlets or the load side of the GFCI & it will also be protected. I try to never place a GFCI receptacle outdoors. I always try to use a standard receptacle outside which is wired from a GFCI outlet or GFI protected outlet which is inside. You very seldom get a tripped receptacle outside that way. I also NEVER wire in series through a receptacle unless it's a GFCI. I always wire from pigtails.
@troops9986
@troops9986 2 жыл бұрын
Nice video man. Takes some courage to put one's livelihood out there for a zillion other arm chair electricians to pick apart. Well done. Just a thought, not a critique... it would have been beneficial, I think, to show a "test/reset" cycle of the secondary outlet. Gfi outlet replacement, although relatively standard fare for a working electrician, can be trickier than people give it credit for. A simple, yet very worthy topic.
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your comment and watching. I agree with you on this whole comment. I have had some pretty interesting talks with so called electricians who try to throw code at me and telling me that I am wrong. Some people just are always negative and see miserable in life. Once again thank you for your comment and watching ☺
@dabananaman1550
@dabananaman1550 Жыл бұрын
This is great info, but what about if it's an old house and there's no ground on any outlet? Would I still put the downstream gfci on the line of the upstream gfci? I already have 3 gfci outlets in the wrong way but as soon as I put the 4th one on it trips and I cant find the issue afterwards?
@davidroddini1512
@davidroddini1512 Жыл бұрын
Yes. If you are using GFCI outlets because the house has no ground on any outlet and are using the GFCI for safety due to lack of ground, you have to make sure to use the second method where all wires are hooked on the line side. If you only want one set of wires going to each outlet then pigtail the incoming wire, the outgoing wire and a third wire that will connect to the outlet.
@AquaLew
@AquaLew 5 ай бұрын
I have 4 outlets the first two are gfci then two regular outlets. The final two stop working... how should I go about fixing this issue?
@carlodonnell146
@carlodonnell146 10 ай бұрын
you can install a regular outlet where the second GFCI is, the way you have now, you just can't install a second GFCI through the load terminals, but I think you can pigtail the hot line into the first GFCI, if you want to put a second GFCI.. Does that all make sense?
@MissyRichmond-vm5rf
@MissyRichmond-vm5rf Ай бұрын
I’m brand new at all this but I’m eager and want to be great at it thank u for your video ! My question is when putting a gfci in what can u do wrong that your other outlets won’t be protected
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Ай бұрын
Wiring them only on the line side will not protect the downstream ones
@Talkinallthings
@Talkinallthings 5 ай бұрын
How do I do this if I have a GFCI with 6 wires. I have the initial line wire but how do I figure out which of the other 2 should also go in the line? Essentially I should have 2 in my line and 1 in my load for hot and neutral. But how do I know if the 2nd or 3rd one go in the line ? I originally had it as 1 in the line and the other 2 in the load but the other gfci wouldn’t work. Watching this video it makes sense now.
@Renassainceman
@Renassainceman Жыл бұрын
I recently replaced several GFCI receptacles for a friend and found three GFCI's wired just as you described. Since all three were on the backsplash behind the sink, I questioned why they would not just used two regular receptacles wired through the load side of a single GFCI. I assume the only reason would be if one trips the others may still stay 'alive'. Is there any other reason I'm not seeing?
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
That's probably exactly why. Alot of people like to have it match so that may be why they did it. I appreciate you watching and commenting ☺
@kandiecandelaria3134
@kandiecandelaria3134 2 жыл бұрын
Ok so I want to tap into an existing GFCI to a new one for a small above ground pool motor ( 11 amps) Going to use a 20 amp gfci. Going to put both grounds connected with a ground connector,neutrals (white) into silver holes. Hot (black) into bronze colored hole on other side. Going to the new gfci ground to ground hole, white ( silver hole) black to hot side on top? Or does it go to bottom load?
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
If you are adding another gfci for a total of 2 then come off of the line side.
@jcaleca60
@jcaleca60 2 жыл бұрын
Ben electrician 37 years retired you could save money by feeding the power into your first GFI the load side goes to regular receptacle that do not have a GFI that's the idea between line and load this is to save money
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 2 жыл бұрын
Totally agree and exactly right. Thanks for watching and commenting ☺
@kristopherdetar4346
@kristopherdetar4346 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic ! ! !
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
I appreciate that ☺
@michaelandrew3816
@michaelandrew3816 25 күн бұрын
So the outlets above my kitchen counter, …for the ones on the same circuit with eachother, I only need to make sure the fist outlet in the circuit is a gfci receptacle…and the rest of the outlets above the counter following the first one can be all regular outlets??
@MountaineerOutdoors
@MountaineerOutdoors 24 күн бұрын
That is correct
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