My previous lathe played nicely with the GFI (ground fault interrupter). The GFI is in a 20 amp outlet.
My new lathe popped the GFI on each of the three circuits in the shop. It ran nicely when I used a very long extension cord and plugged it into a non-GFI protected circuit in the house. Several friends with the same lathe did not have a problem with it tripping the GFI.
The outlet GFI's were made by Leviton. I called them to see if they had any suggestions and was forwarded to a GFI specialist. After getting a nice brief discussion on how a GFI works, he asked more about my problem. I told him about my new lathe popping every GFI circuit that I tried to use. He said that some motors will do that. Several people previously gave me suggestions such as getting a different lathe, upgrading the GFI to a hospital grade GFI, and using a GFI breaker. He told me that the electronics in each grade of GFI are the same. There are differnces in the construction of the GFI. He said that a GFI breaker would not work. He said that in 2015 the specifications for a GFI became stricter and homes built starting in 2016 would have the new GFI recepticals. He thought that my lathe may not trip one made prior to the change. He then said that another option that would meet the electrical code would be to plug it into a dedicated non-GMI circuit in the shop. The motor/electronics on my lathe could not be converted to 220. But I had an unused 220 circuit and had an electrician change it from a 220 circuit to a single outlet 110 non-GFI circuit that works with my lathe.
I just wanted to let others know how the problem was addessed in case you encounter a similar issue with a new lathe in the future.
Rick
My new lathe popped the GFI on each of the three circuits in the shop. It ran nicely when I used a very long extension cord and plugged it into a non-GFI protected circuit in the house. Several friends with the same lathe did not have a problem with it tripping the GFI.
The outlet GFI's were made by Leviton. I called them to see if they had any suggestions and was forwarded to a GFI specialist. After getting a nice brief discussion on how a GFI works, he asked more about my problem. I told him about my new lathe popping every GFI circuit that I tried to use. He said that some motors will do that. Several people previously gave me suggestions such as getting a different lathe, upgrading the GFI to a hospital grade GFI, and using a GFI breaker. He told me that the electronics in each grade of GFI are the same. There are differnces in the construction of the GFI. He said that a GFI breaker would not work. He said that in 2015 the specifications for a GFI became stricter and homes built starting in 2016 would have the new GFI recepticals. He thought that my lathe may not trip one made prior to the change. He then said that another option that would meet the electrical code would be to plug it into a dedicated non-GMI circuit in the shop. The motor/electronics on my lathe could not be converted to 220. But I had an unused 220 circuit and had an electrician change it from a 220 circuit to a single outlet 110 non-GFI circuit that works with my lathe.
I just wanted to let others know how the problem was addessed in case you encounter a similar issue with a new lathe in the future.
Rick