lckstckn2smknbrls
Lieutenant Junior Grade
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2008
- Messages
- 1,114
Code where I live states that any outside, sink area or bathroom areas have to have GFCI circuits. And so the GFCI in the master vanity area also covers the guest bathroom and outside receptacles as well. And even when I wired my shop, I installed GFCI on all the outside receptacles. And yes the county inspector did visually inspect and sign off on all the wiring as well. So the house has only one GFCI receptacle. I guess at the time they wired the house, wire was a lot cheaper then the GFCI receptacles were. Sound expensive to run copper wires all over the house and outside to be covered by one GFCI receptacle. Had I wired the house, I am certain I would have used multiple GFCI receptacles myself.
If your present boxes are too filled. Either remove them and install deeper versions or locate the common receptacle and replace with the GFCI. Then every things down the line is covered. JMHO!
When the GFCI outlet was installed in the upstairs bathroom the wires then ran to the downstairs bathroom. If you tripped the GFCI outlet b/c of something you did in the downstairs bathroom you would have to go upstairs and hope no one was in the upstairs bathroom so you could rest the GFCI outlet. I fixed that by moving the wires to the downstairs bathroom from the load side of the upstairs GFCI outlet to the line side and installing a GFCI outlet in the downstairs bathroom.