To wire a GFI outlet, first turn off the power to the circuit. Connect the black wire to the brass screw, the white wire to the silver screw, and the bare copper wire to the green screw. Make sure to follow the manufacturer's instructions and consult a professional if needed.
To properly hook up a GFI outlet, first turn off the power to the circuit. Remove the old outlet and connect the wires to the corresponding terminals on the GFI outlet - white wire to silver terminal, black wire to brass terminal, and green or bare wire to the green terminal. Make sure to follow the manufacturer's instructions and test the outlet before use.
To properly hook up a GFI outlet, first turn off the power to the circuit at the breaker box. Remove the old outlet and connect the wires to the corresponding terminals on the GFI outlet (line and load). Make sure to connect the ground wire as well. Secure the outlet in place and turn the power back on to test the GFI functionality.
To wire a GFI outlet correctly, first turn off the power to the circuit. Connect the black wire to the brass screw, the white wire to the silver screw, and the bare copper wire to the green screw. Make sure the "Line" terminals are used for incoming power and the "Load" terminals are used for additional outlets. Test the outlet to ensure it is working properly.
Not in residential use. Most use a cord plugged in to a GFI outlet.
To install a GFI plug, first turn off the power to the outlet at the circuit breaker. Remove the existing outlet cover and outlet. Connect the wires to the corresponding terminals on the GFI plug, following the manufacturer's instructions. Secure the GFI plug in place and replace the outlet cover. Turn the power back on and test the GFI plug to ensure it is working properly.
To install a GFI, first turn off the power to the circuit at the breaker box. Remove the outlet cover and disconnect the wires from the old outlet. Connect the wires to the corresponding terminals on the GFI, following the manufacturer's instructions. Secure the GFI in place and replace the outlet cover. Turn the power back on and test the GFI to ensure it is working properly.
Your GFI plug may not be working due to a tripped circuit, a faulty GFI outlet, or a wiring issue. Check the circuit breaker, reset the GFI outlet, and inspect the wiring to troubleshoot the problem. If the issue persists, consult a professional electrician for further assistance.
Don't know what you mean by back wire, but most GFCI outlets have a circuit to attach additional outlets that will be protected by the GFCI. Keep total load in minds.
If t hat GFI is the only plug on the circuit then yes. If there are other plugs you have to find out how many so that you don't exceed the capacity of that circuit. If the GFI is the only plug there, turn the power off to it at it's breaker and run the appropriate wire to the new plug you want to install. Wire in the new plug, then make the connections at the old GFI plug. Always work towards the power, even if the circuit is dead. It's good practice. This way you rarely if ever have to work on live circuits. Start at the furthest point in the circuit away from the electrical panel and work toward it. You can have the new outlet protected by the GFI if you connect the wires from the new outlet to the LOAD side of the GFI. If the GFI is still new there is usually a yellow sticker covering the screws, those 2 screws are the LOAD side meaning that if anything happens downstream on that circuit to make a GFI trip the GFI will sense it and turn the circuit off. If you want just a standard outlet then put the new wires on the same screws as the old wires on the GFI. Once you're done, and all the boxes are closed and safe, turn the breaker back on.
Your GFI may not reset due to a faulty GFI outlet, a tripped circuit breaker, a ground fault in the wiring, or a connected device causing the fault.
Are you sure it is the bulb that its blowing and not the Gfi tripping? Try resetting the gfi. Also try swithing to an incandescent bulb and test your gfi. Also test the cfl in a non-gfi outlet. Cfls return power they don't use and may make the gfi trip. I am not an electrician, just personal experience.
The GFI outlet was there for a reason, such as a bathroom or other location around water where there is more risk of a shock being harmful or lethal. If it was a GFI, keep it a GFI. Also that outlet may be protecting other standard outlets being fed from the GFI. You can only after the house has passed inspection after the house was finished being built. It's a requirement that all new houses have to have a GFI wherever there's water, but it's perfectly legal once you buy the house to do this modification. However, it's highly not recommended unless there's more than one GFI outlet hooked up to the same circuit. If there's more than one, it's optional to take one off and replace it with a standard outlet because you really only need 1 GFI outlet to protect the rest of the outlets on the same circuit. But if it's already there, just leave it as is. Example: power box>GFI>normal>normal>GFI>normal; end; You can take off the second GFI and and every normal non-GFI outlet will function like GFI. If you take off the left one, only the last normal outlet will be GFI protected, the ons to the left wouldn't.