TheMerkle
Well-Known Member
Any help would be greatly appreciated:
I built the rig per the diagram below. I followed it as exactly as I could. When i finished it, I was careful to check and double check all of my circuits with a multimeter for continuity. Then, I paid an electrician to review it for me and got the greenlight.
When it came time for the big moment, I plugged it in to the outlet in my garage which is protected by a 30a GFCI breaker. The first time it popped the breaker, and I quickly realized that Amazon sent me a NC e-stop and not the NO I needed. No big deal there, with the button depressed all was well, and when twisted to release it would pop the 30a gfci in the outdoor subpanel.
So, I moved on to turn the key switch on and my luck ran out. It immediately threw the circuit inside the main panel inside the house. It didn't throw the outdoor GFCI, nor did it pop any of the fuses inside the control panel appliance (I used fast blow for every circuit).
Can anyone give me an idea where to start diagnosing this thing?
I built the rig per the diagram below. I followed it as exactly as I could. When i finished it, I was careful to check and double check all of my circuits with a multimeter for continuity. Then, I paid an electrician to review it for me and got the greenlight.
When it came time for the big moment, I plugged it in to the outlet in my garage which is protected by a 30a GFCI breaker. The first time it popped the breaker, and I quickly realized that Amazon sent me a NC e-stop and not the NO I needed. No big deal there, with the button depressed all was well, and when twisted to release it would pop the 30a gfci in the outdoor subpanel.
So, I moved on to turn the key switch on and my luck ran out. It immediately threw the circuit inside the main panel inside the house. It didn't throw the outdoor GFCI, nor did it pop any of the fuses inside the control panel appliance (I used fast blow for every circuit).
Can anyone give me an idea where to start diagnosing this thing?