WREKS
Jetboaters Lieutenant
- Messages
- 1,167
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- Location
- Port Saint Lucie, Florida
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2007
- Boat Model
- SX
- Boat Length
- 23
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Do you think there is any way that a caseta switch installed on my 3rd floor would impact my GFCI in the kitchen?Hey Julian, as an Electrician regardless of what happened I would definitely pull the non working gfci’s out and check power To them for starters. Other factors that may be overlooked and coincidental are the age and manufacturer of the gfci outlets. Sometimes I see stuff like this where you may not have known that one was already bad then the other one quit also. I spend a lot of time troubleshooting and I’ve seen a lot of strange coincidences. Btw I love Lutron casetta, especially with the app and smart bridge. Good luck!
I would say it is possible,though very unlikely. If you haven’t already, try putting the regular switch back in and see what happens. However if the one gfci won’t reset and it has power then it needs to be replaced.Do you think there is any way that a caseta switch installed on my 3rd floor would impact my GFCI in the kitchen?
I too love the Lutron Caseta system. I have 65 installed and am just about done (which is why I was putting them in on the 3rd floor).
If you just turned breakers off and didn’t purposely “trip”one by shorting then the most obvious to me would be to go back to the panel and check everyone for tightness and power output. Sometimes when you Short circuit or put a heavy load on a Circuit with a weak point (bad connection) it will open at that point. The trick is finding that point.I pulled both GFCIs that are unresponsive and wont reset (actually one is blown, one is unreponsive). Neither have power to them as far as I can tell (voltage tester applies between all the wires....nothing lights up). So this means (as far as I know)...that something down the line is blown and stopping power from getting to these two. I just cant find that "something"....and have NO CLUE how I would find it.....
I pulled both GFCIs that are unresponsive and wont reset (actually one is blown, one is unreponsive). Neither have power to them as far as I can tell (voltage tester applies between all the wires....nothing lights up). So this means (as far as I know)...that something down the line is blown and stopping power from getting to these two. I just cant find that "something"....and have NO CLUE how I would find it.....
Have gone back to that panel multiple times! Part of the circuit is live part is not.....(I'm 95% certain the porch lights are on the same ciruit and they come on).If you just turned breakers off and didn’t purposely “trip”one by shorting then the most obvious to me would be to go back to the panel and check everyone for tightness and power output. Sometimes when you Short circuit or put a heavy load on a Circuit with a weak point (bad connection) it will open at that point. The trick is finding that point.
Yeah sounds like your gonna have to do dig a little deeper on this one, it’s kinda tricky for me without actually be there scoping things out. Good luckHave gone back to that panel multiple times! Part of the circuit is live part is not.....(I'm 95% certain the porch lights are on the same ciruit and they come on).
For a quick check use a non contact tick tracer, then use a multimeter for actual voltage check. Klein or ideal make decent little tracersSo...if I wanted to try and trace the wires back to where the voltage stops....what tool do I need to accomplish this and is it vastly cheaper than the electrician I've called (who is on vacation until after t-giving)? I'm envisioning a way to trace the dead wires under the house back to where they are no longer dead.....
Don't know how I've lived without one of these! I'll be at home depot today to get one!!!!For a quick check use a non contact tick tracer, then use a multimeter for actual voltage check. Klein or ideal make decent little tracers
Have gone back to that panel multiple times! Part of the circuit is live part is not.....(I'm 95% certain the porch lights are on the same ciruit and they come on).
Sounds like quite the chase your on now. When they go into the wall I usually start opening things up in that viciny like outlets near by. Sounds like your moving in the right direction.OK...been to HD and back. Am tooled up....and all I've been able to do is:
1) Confirm the breaker is not bad (have current at the breaker)
2) Confirm again that I have no current at either of these GFCIs (also was told at HD that there shouldn't be two GFCIs on the same
3) Confirmed that half the lights on my porch are out, the other half are not (and there is no power at the switches)
4) Tried to trace the wires under the house....found the dead line.....it disapears into the wall.....
Going to go and look to see if there is a GFCI outlet in the garage on a wall with shelves covering it (pretty sure the answer is no...but this is bugging the F out of me!)