MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,258
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
Maybe you actually have a problem?
Okay, so all of mine are inside with a regular plug down stream and outside and I have never had that to happen not saying that's the problem just comparing.Receptacles mounted outdoors in gray w/p boxes with In-Use covers. The one that tripped most recently is under an awning and about 6' above ground, so even further removed from moisture.
GFCI are designed to trip on very very small amounts of current (~6mA) A nearby strike can raise the local ground potential by more than enough to cause a small surge of current back from your ground/neutral and trigger a trip.May be one of those stupid questions most people should know, but ....
On occasion, one or more of my outdoor GFCIs will trip out if lightning if close enough to be quick and loud, but not really nearby enough to be damaging. Almost like it's from the sound alone, but that wouldn't make sense. I have about 5 or 6 and it's usually only one that does it and not always the same one. None of the indoor ones trip.
I know they age, but it doesn't seem to matter if it's one of the newer ones or not.
I also have a couple that seem to trip on power blinks when power goes down for only a few seconds, then restores.
They're all wired properly and test normal with those plug in testers.
Sorry to hear it. Some homes in New England are wired up with coils that short to ground that are removed to "improve" the signal. You might ask your telco to have a look at your network/phone connection block on your house.I've lost 3 land line phones to lightening strikes in the last few years. As near as I can tell it's coming in the phone line. I also had an old surge protector which had slots for the phone lines but that got burned up, and I can't find another for the phone line. Yet my router, which is plugged in to the same line, has never had a problem. I tightened the clamp for the ground wire down, hopefully that will help.
Good post.GFCI are designed to trip on very very small amounts of current (~6mA) A nearby strike can raise the local ground potential by more than enough to cause a small surge of current back from your ground/neutral and trigger a trip.
What Causes GFCI Outlets to Keep Tripping? | Fluke
This issue of "Solid Ground" talks about ground fault circuit interrupters (GFCIs), why they are necessary, and how to troubleshoot GFCI-protected circuits.www.fluke.com
It is always possible that you have a neutral/ground issue, either on your pole mounted transformer or in your main panel/panel ground, but it wouldn't be my first thought.
If you don't have one, a whole house surge suppressor might help somewhat.
All the best,
Peter