Help with GFCI

Got everything wired up inside the building. Next is runnign service wire fromt he sub panel to my house. Anyway, all outlets on the wall are on one 20 amp circuit. The first on near the panel starts the circuit and is a GFCI. The rest are ran off and protected by that GFCI.

Ceiling outlets are wired to a switch. Two circuits come from the panel to the switch. These are on a regular 20 amp breaker. They will be replaced with a GFCI breaker.

ANyway, I wanted to make sure everythign workied so I wired some leftover 10-3 wire to my panel. On the other end I wired a plug. I pluged this into an extension cord to my house GFCI outlet. (About 40 feet away.).

Ceilign outlets and lights work great! Switch works.

However I cant get the wall outlets to work. On my GFCI the outlet green led light stays lit properly, but no tools work when pluged into the outlet, also I cant get voltage on any of the outlets when I check with a voltmeter. Does the green light indicate it is getting power and everything is connected correctly? I only had a minute this mornign to work with it but It does not look like the GFCI is tripped but I cant be 100% sure until I get home.

If there is somethign tripping the GFCI is there a good way of checkign without having to undo all the electrical outlets?

I appreciate any help!

Reply to
stryped
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Are you sure that power is coming into the GFCI on the "Line" terminal and going out on the "Load" terminal?

Reply to
Jim Stewart

Some of those new receptacles the green light is reversed - lighted indicates Tripped, and light out is OK. Try resetting it, and see what happens.

If all else fails, RTFM - "Read The Friendly Manual" - there is an instruction sheet that came in the GFCI box, and they have a Troubleshooting section.

On the new "Smartlock Plus" GFCI receptacles they do a Self Test on power-up and will not set if there is a wiring error - polarity reversed, Line/Load reversed, improper ground, etc. When you press the reset button you'll hear a double click as it sets, sees the fault, and trips back open again a tenth of a second later.

Check your temporary power hookup, if there is no ground that could easily do it.

Ceiling receptacles meant for the door opener or the overhead lights do NOT need to be GFCI protected, you'll just be fighting false trips if you ever get a marginal light fixture.

If you put a refrigerator out in the shop, put it on a dedicated Non-GFCI outlet from the garage door opener feed, or straight from the panel. You don't want that tripping off and killing the fridge with food in it, especially when you aren't out there every day.

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Reply to
Bruce L. Bergman

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