For all you electrical & wiring geniuses....
Our 25 has shore power. Power goes to a circuit breaker board and our two factory installed 110v outlets have a dedicated breaker.
From the factory it was wired:
-from breaker to a GFCI (under the dinette)
-from the GFCI, to a plug behind the pilot seat (long run)
All this appears to be 12 gauge three wire tin.
I have since installed another plug from the GFCI into the "closet" to power our microwave; short run of about 6'. This run is done with 10 gauge, marine approved tin wiring. Upon testing w/ our genset here is what happened.
-GFCI works fine
-new plug I installed works fine
-when I place a load on the plug behind the pilot's seat, the GFCI tips.
WHY? :?
I have re-checked all wiring; all looks fine. I have unplugged the micro, then tried the pilot-seat plug; same outcome.
As usual, mahalo for any/all input. We electrically challenged appreciate it.....[/u][/i]
Our 25 has shore power. Power goes to a circuit breaker board and our two factory installed 110v outlets have a dedicated breaker.
From the factory it was wired:
-from breaker to a GFCI (under the dinette)
-from the GFCI, to a plug behind the pilot seat (long run)
All this appears to be 12 gauge three wire tin.
I have since installed another plug from the GFCI into the "closet" to power our microwave; short run of about 6'. This run is done with 10 gauge, marine approved tin wiring. Upon testing w/ our genset here is what happened.
-GFCI works fine
-new plug I installed works fine
-when I place a load on the plug behind the pilot's seat, the GFCI tips.
WHY? :?
I have re-checked all wiring; all looks fine. I have unplugged the micro, then tried the pilot-seat plug; same outcome.
As usual, mahalo for any/all input. We electrically challenged appreciate it.....[/u][/i]