footdale
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Albuquerque, NM
Cliffs:
- Pool pump is on a 220V circuit - always runs fine.
- Separate 110V circuit on GFI breaker (brand new) for pool heater/outdoor receptacle constantly trips when pump ground and heater ground are connected.
- Everything is fine if heater circuit is completely isolated from pump. This is hard right now since everything is mounted to a metal plate. I have to pull the receptacle off the metal box.
- I just want to make sure I get it hooked up right so no one gets shocked
Longer Version:
Pictures are below.
The old electrical was a mess, so I got all new boxes, conduit, and panel for my pool pump and heater control. I thought I understood electrical, but this issue has been driving me nuts. If all the grounds are connected together, the GFI breaker trips, even under no load. If I isolate the ground of the 110V heater circuit from the panel, then the breaker does not trip and the heater works fine. The problem is not with the heater, I got the same response when I completely disconnected the heater. I've checked continuity and none of the hot lines are shorted to ground.
The pump has a bare copper wire that goes underground and connects to the pool handrails. If there is a difference in ground potential between this ground and the ground where the breaker box is physically located, could that trip the GFI? I don't get though if everything is referenced to the same ground, why the GFI breaker trips.
In short, how should this be properly hooked up?
Thanks!
- Joe
Control Panel:
Breaker box:
Breaker box diagram:
Panel diagram:
Pump:
- Pool pump is on a 220V circuit - always runs fine.
- Separate 110V circuit on GFI breaker (brand new) for pool heater/outdoor receptacle constantly trips when pump ground and heater ground are connected.
- Everything is fine if heater circuit is completely isolated from pump. This is hard right now since everything is mounted to a metal plate. I have to pull the receptacle off the metal box.
- I just want to make sure I get it hooked up right so no one gets shocked
Longer Version:
Pictures are below.
The old electrical was a mess, so I got all new boxes, conduit, and panel for my pool pump and heater control. I thought I understood electrical, but this issue has been driving me nuts. If all the grounds are connected together, the GFI breaker trips, even under no load. If I isolate the ground of the 110V heater circuit from the panel, then the breaker does not trip and the heater works fine. The problem is not with the heater, I got the same response when I completely disconnected the heater. I've checked continuity and none of the hot lines are shorted to ground.
The pump has a bare copper wire that goes underground and connects to the pool handrails. If there is a difference in ground potential between this ground and the ground where the breaker box is physically located, could that trip the GFI? I don't get though if everything is referenced to the same ground, why the GFI breaker trips.
In short, how should this be properly hooked up?
Thanks!
- Joe
Control Panel:

Breaker box:

Breaker box diagram:

Panel diagram:

Pump:
