Re: Power Outage: Electrical Outlet, GFI and Fuse Breaker

Re: Power Outage: Electrical Outlet, GFI and Fuse Breaker

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 Re: Power Outage: Electrical Outlet, GFI and Fuse Breaker Bill Reply Send to a Friend   Print
 
Subject Author Date
Power Outage: Electrical Outlet, GFI and Fuse Breaker Billy 07-30-2006
The GFI and breaker are two separate things.

In this case the GFI did not trip but the breaker did trip.

The GFI detects if you are being electrocuted and turns off the electricity
in a fraction of a second before the electricity can do any damage. You
would not even notice anything. If a GFI is constantly tripping when you use
a certain appliance, that appliance may be faulty and might electrocute you
if you used it in a regular outlet.

A circuit breaker will trip if there is too much electricity being used for
the circuit - too many things turned on at the same time.

If you have a breaker frequently tripping, you can have an electrician
install a new outlet on its own circuit or connect an existing outlet to its
own circuit. For example in older homes a refrigerator and the entire living
room may be on one circuit and breaker frequently trips. Have electrician
install refrigerator on its own circuit.

You can have your bathroom GFI outlet wired to its own circuit on its own
breaker. The hair dryer probably uses a lot of electricity.


"Billy" wrote in message
> My wife was using the haridryer in our recently remodeled bathroom when
> the lights, hair dryer and some outlets went off in that section of the
> house. I checked the GFI outlet that the hair dryer was plugged into
> and a GFI reset did nothing. I then went to check the breaker panel in
> the basement and all were still in the "on" position. I found the
> breaker that controls this area of the home and switched it "off", then
> back "on" again. All that power was then restored.
>
> Does this mean I've a bad breaker switch or is the GFI doing what it
> supposed to do? I am not sure if the GFI "breaks the connection but the
> breaker panel switch stays on. Additionally, I am not understanding why
> the breaker was still on yet a reset of the GFI alone did not restore
> the power. She continues to use the hair dryer daily in that bathroom
> without further incident. Can anyone help me understand the issue, if
> any?
>




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