I am stumped by the gfci outlet in the bathroom. Upper receptacle is dead, lower one is live. Downstream is dead. This is a new outlet, replaced old one that had same problem. Both line and load screws on sides measure 120v, lower outlet is 120 but upper outlet is 0.
Protection isn't tripping...any ideas?
And how was it fixed?Deleting an OP after fixing your problem it is pretty much the exact opposite way to use a forum. Thankfully Magnus quoted it. Why the hell would you do that?
Here it is again - XKCD - Wisdom of the Ancients.
It's bad enough when there's no answer to the post. But it's worse when the person says "I have the solution." and then destroys the evidence.
OP, return and redeem yourself! For the future!
Lol, I must have just missed Magnus' helpful post when I deleted it.
Really, I deleted it because my diagnoses was completely incorrect, and I didn't want someone stumbling upon my situation thinking it matched. I probably should have edited my post with what really happened, but between typing on an ipad and embarrassment, I opted to just delete.
What really happened...
After posting, I went back to the outlet and retested. This time I saw a reading of 4V on the top outlet...Being an engineer, I jammed the probe a little bit farther in, and suddenly, 120V. Ok, so the outlet is ok.
I was troubleshooting why the outlets along the vanity weren't working, and because this outlet is like 4 feet away, by the toilet, I assumed that they were on the same GFCI. Now that I surmised that the new outlet was ok, I went around the house, looking for more GFCI. Turns out the kid's bathroom had tripped, and they didn't bother to tell me that their toothbrushes weren't recharging or whatever. I reset this outlet, and now the wife can dry her hair again in our bathroom.
The morale of the story, if there is to be one? Check all the outlets before posting that you have some crazy scenario where half of a GFCI outlet isn't working.
Deleting an OP after fixing your problem it is pretty much the exact opposite way to use a forum. Thankfully Magnus quoted it. Why the hell would you do that?
Being an engineer, I jammed the probe a little bit farther in Reasonable.
Thank you for posting it.Lol, I must have just missed Magnus' helpful post when I deleted it.
Really, I deleted it because my diagnoses was completely incorrect, and I didn't want someone stumbling upon my situation thinking it matched. I probably should have edited my post with what really happened, but between typing on an ipad and embarrassment, I opted to just delete.
What really happened...
After posting, I went back to the outlet and retested. This time I saw a reading of 4V on the top outlet...Being an engineer, I jammed the probe a little bit farther in, and suddenly, 120V. Ok, so the outlet is ok.
I was troubleshooting why the outlets along the vanity weren't working, and because this outlet is like 4 feet away, by the toilet, I assumed that they were on the same GFCI. Now that I surmised that the new outlet was ok, I went around the house, looking for more GFCI. Turns out the kid's bathroom had tripped, and they didn't bother to tell me that their toothbrushes weren't recharging or whatever. I reset this outlet, and now the wife can dry her hair again in our bathroom.
The morale of the story, if there is to be one? Check all the outlets before posting that you have some crazy scenario where half of a GFCI outlet isn't working.
Reasonable.Being an engineer, I jammed the probe a little bit farther in
Years ago, a friend of mine was helping his Dad built a computer. The Dad has his Phd in chemical engineering and the same attitude.....he had to buy another cpu when he bent the pins because he had it turned around.:biggrin:
"Shove it in harder! It's ok, I'm an engineer!"
Deleting an OP after fixing your problem it is pretty much the exact opposite way to use a forum. Thankfully Magnus quoted it. Why the hell would you do that?
The cost of wire is only part of it. An electrician will wire a house pretty much however the guy writing the check wants it done.
It should have been a open letter to cheap-ass homeowners who really only care about square footage and granite counter tops.
Amen brother!
I hear this all the time. Owner wants each room to be on it's own 20amp breaker, with a separate lighting circuit of course. They want an outlet every 4 feet, they want a 3 wire double switched circuit to the ceiling light "in case they ever want a fan", they want cat5, cable, and phone in every room, they want 4 recessed lights in every room, and 1 in every closet, they want it all, the only thing they don't want is to pay for it.