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Bought a cord from a HBT member that was sold as a GFCI. Pulled mine apart and started wiring it into my HLT only to discover that there was no monitoring of the ground wire. Looked a little closer and found out it was a LCDI (Leakage Current Detection and Interruption), not a GFCI. You can see from the attached picture that the ground wire passes through the housing. The LCDI connects to a mesh shield around the long part of the cord, but never contacts the ground. From what I can find, these are made for fire protection and will not protect you from shock the way a GFCI will.
Anyone have any insight?
Anyone have any insight?
Leak-current detection and interruption (LCDI) plugs
Because portable air conditioners have caused many electrical fires, those sold in the United States now must have leak-current detection and interruption (LCDI) plugs. The cords have a fine wire mesh around the conductors and circuitry to detect any current leaking from the conductors to the mesh, which would happen if the cord were damaged or frayed. These could be NEMA 5–15, 5–20, 6–15, 6–20 or 6–30 plugs, depending on the air conditioner. The plug is equipped with “Test” and “Reset” buttons on the housing.

