Was it raining when it trips, was it dry for the 2 weeks it worked. GFCI is "funny" with moisture. There is another thread about GFCI breakers and the things they do.
Anthony
Was it raining when it trips, was it dry for the 2 weeks it worked. GFCI is "funny" with moisture. There is another thread about GFCI breakers and the things they do.
Anthony
Hello Traceyb and Anthony,
Yes Traceyb the lights are on a separate breaker from everything else. Anthony, the rain question is a difficult one as we have gotten a lot a rain so far this season but no more than in past years. I have not been able to make a correlation with the weather for example wednesday the light kept tripping the switch and it was a dry day. The next day, Thursday, the light worked and we had a major thunderstorm, the light came on directly after the storm, no problem. Today, Friday morning, the day after the storm, I turned the light on and its been on for hours. Any ideas?
Thanks,
Paul
So its on its own GFCI breaker? So the pump should have its own breaker. As a test (if you feel comfortable and familiar around electricity, you could be electrocuted if your not sure what you are doing) shut both pump and light breakers off, you could disconnect the wire going to the "light" breaker and put it to the "pump" breaker(you must disconnect the pump wire and leave it disconnected while trying this. This way you could see if the problem travels...what I mean is, if the problem still occurs, breaker trips, its not the breaker, its the wiring past breaker or light itself. I think GFCI breakers are pricey, so this could be a quick test.
Anthony
Thanks for the suggest Anthony, quite logical!
Paul
I disagree. GFCI breakers are dirt cheap. Hospital bills and funerals are pricey--it just depends on your perspective.Originally Posted by posguy
Carl