augiedoggy
Well-Known Member
I understand the GFCI concern.Yup. Think about how a GFCI works (a 120V GFCI is a little easier to understand, and for two 120V circuits, we only need to understand the 120V versions.) A GFCI measures the sum of the currents flowing thru the hot line and the neutral line, with current flowing in one direction considered positive, and current in the opposite direction negative, and in US AC circuits direction changes 120 times/second. If the signed currents in the hot and neutral don't add up to zero (within a 6 mA tolerance) the GFCI trips the breaker. Thus all the current in one hot line must flow back thru the neutral in the same circuit. If the circuits aren't kept completely separate in the control panel, then some of the current from one circuit will inevitably flow back thru the other circuits neutral. This will cause unbalanced currents at both GFCI's, and both should trip. As noted in my previous post, grounds don't get involved with the GFCI action, so you can, and should have a common ground.
Brew on![]()
I was referring to the fact that my plug in panels have to be inspected and meet code for some reason (likely the commercial use).