F
Fred Bloggs
Guest
On Sunday, August 6, 2023 at 10:51:54â¯PM UTC-4, Eddy Lee wrote:
https://www.fluke.com/en-us/learn/blog/grounding/chasing-ghost-trips-in-gfci-protected-circuits
You don\'t need to buy a specialized clamp meter.
The most common cause for protective trips in equipment in otherwise good condition are the input transient suppressor MOVs. The MOVs degrade over time due to abuse outside their ratings, things like grid \"swells.\" See the section on \"End Of Life Scenarios\".
https://www.nemasurge.org/how-spd-s-work/
I am using the portable charger on friend\'s house, but it\'s tripping the GFCI circuit. How is that possible if the vehicle is isolated from the ground with four rubber tires?
The 15A power extension is fine. I have used this charger on another house before. Is the GFCI outlet too sensitive?
Anyway to deal with this? Temporary bypassing the GFCI outlet?
https://www.fluke.com/en-us/learn/blog/grounding/chasing-ghost-trips-in-gfci-protected-circuits
You don\'t need to buy a specialized clamp meter.
The most common cause for protective trips in equipment in otherwise good condition are the input transient suppressor MOVs. The MOVs degrade over time due to abuse outside their ratings, things like grid \"swells.\" See the section on \"End Of Life Scenarios\".
https://www.nemasurge.org/how-spd-s-work/