04-14-2023, 08:44 AM
I am replacing a GFCI in an older home with only two wires coming in -- hot and neutral.
The existing GFCI is wired thusly:
Hot wire to brass "Line" terminal.
Neutral wire to silver "Load" terminal.
Pigtail from grounding terminal to silver "Load" terminal.
If I move the neutral from "Load" to "Line," the outlet works on the LIne side, but not on Load side -- indicates a bad GFCI.
I replaced the old GFCI, wired hot to brass "Line"
and neutral to silver "Line."
Both Line and Load outlets now work.
I did not pigtail the ground.
I just had all my non-grounded outlets in my home replaced with GFCIs. I did not do the work -- had a licensed electrician do it. I was told that a way to ground an ungrounded receptacle was to use a GFCI, but I don't know how he wired them.
Suggestions? I am in Indiana at a friends home, not back in Oklahoma, otherwise I would have had the same electrician switch it out.
Suggestions?
The existing GFCI is wired thusly:
Hot wire to brass "Line" terminal.
Neutral wire to silver "Load" terminal.
Pigtail from grounding terminal to silver "Load" terminal.
If I move the neutral from "Load" to "Line," the outlet works on the LIne side, but not on Load side -- indicates a bad GFCI.
I replaced the old GFCI, wired hot to brass "Line"
and neutral to silver "Line."
Both Line and Load outlets now work.
I did not pigtail the ground.
I just had all my non-grounded outlets in my home replaced with GFCIs. I did not do the work -- had a licensed electrician do it. I was told that a way to ground an ungrounded receptacle was to use a GFCI, but I don't know how he wired them.
Suggestions? I am in Indiana at a friends home, not back in Oklahoma, otherwise I would have had the same electrician switch it out.
Suggestions?
The only tool I have is a lathe. Everything else is an accessory.