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Need help understanding GFCI & AFCI

4K views 14 replies 8 participants last post by  md2lgyk 
#1 ·
I learned a little about GFCI & AFCI yesterday at the Home Depot. The electrical guy explained it like this:

GFCI protects humans against being shocked.
GFCI are required in any room with water or a bare concrete floor (local code)
GFCI can be a breaker or receptacle. If installed as receptacles -- one GFCI receptacle at the beginning of the circuit will protect non-GFCI receptacles further down the circuit.

AFCI protects houses against fire
AFCI are required in bedrooms, dining rooms, living rooms, ect where there is no water
AFCI are breakers and protect the entire circuit

I may be misstating what he said but that is how I remembered it.

He said something else that confused me - AFCI breakers cannot be used on the same circuit as GFCI receptacles. Then he said that maybe you could but it might not pass code.

Why can't GFCI receptacles be used on AFCI protected circuits?

Why would this be against code?
 
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#8 ·
My preference, maybe not NEC's.
You didn't say that. You said "You need...". This implies it is mandatory, which it is not.

This is why non-professionals should refrain from giving advice on boards like this.
 
#12 ·
I just want to clearify the poster comment about the combation AFCI/GFCI and yes there are few manufacter do make the combo verison I know SqD, ClutterHammer , GE , Seimens and few others do make them and the combo vierson is avibale but the cost will varies a little depending on what brand and which place will stock it.

Merci.
Marc
 
#10 ·
I am waiting for padded walls and floors to become mandatory in a home. Oh, and no sharp edges or corners either. :thumbsup:

I really do feel that electricity is just too unsafe to have in a home. There ought to be a law against it.
 
#15 ·
The Home Depot guy's explanation of the two breaker types is pretty much correct. Not so much his code knowledge. I've never heard of using a GFCI on an AFCI circuit (or vice versa) but I don't think it's prohibited.

Were you asking about this for a specific reason? Code requirements vary widely by location. For example, where I live the applicable code is still NEC 2005. In the log house I built I only had to have AFCIs for the bedroom circuits.
 
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