General > General Technical Chat

GFCIs and Treadmills

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thm_w:
Didn't realize GFCI was required in the garage already, "GFCI receptacles are required in bathrooms, garages, crawl spaces, basements, laundry rooms and areas where a water source is present." Definitely only on newer builds?


--- Quote from: WatchfulEye on May 02, 2024, 06:59:49 pm ---I thought that UL and IEC standards specify a maximum of 0.5 mA of earth leakage current for corded appliances (except heating/cooking appliances which are allowed a bit more).

If such a device had leakage high enough to trip a GFCI, surely it would be non-compliant with the relevant standards?

--- End quote ---

I would assume this treadmill is allowed 3.5mA, as its a grounded appliance.

https://slpower.com/App-slpower/images/whitepapers/An113%20Leakage%20Current.pdf
https://electrical.theiet.org/wiring-matters/years/2021/85-may-2021/back-to-the-forum-earth-leakage/

m k:

--- Quote from: Sal Ammoniac on May 02, 2024, 06:28:02 pm ---
--- Quote from: m k on May 02, 2024, 06:11:18 pm ---
--- Quote from: Sal Ammoniac on May 01, 2024, 07:43:28 pm ---When she runs an extension cord into the house and plugs it into a non-GCFI circuit, the treadmill works fine.

--- End quote ---

Extension cord from one area to the other is a no-no.

There is a safety barrier between areas.
Don't break it.


--- End quote ---

Hey, what can I say? She's a software engineer.  :-//

--- End quote ---

If PE is connected through and through the hole in a barrier is much smaller.

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