G.f.c.i. troubleshooting – Balboa Water Group BP 60Hz User Manual

Page 11

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Manufactured under one or more of these patents. U.S. Patents: 5332944, 5361215, 5550753, 5559720, 5,883,459, 6253227, 6282370, 6590188, 6976052, 6965815, 7030343, 7,417, 834 b2,

Canadian Patent: 2342614, Australian patent: 2373248 other patents both foreign and domestic applied for and pending. All material copyright of Balboa Water Group.

42211B

G.F.C.I. Troubleshooting

IF CORRECT WIRING IS VERIFIED

Check to see if the proper G.F.C.I. is installed.

Check the label in the system box near TB1 to determine the

maximum amperage draw for the system.
Be sure the G.F.C.I. is rated for more amperage than the

system will draw.
For a 240 V dedicated system, a 2-pole G.F.C.I. with no load

neutral is acceptable.
For a 120/240 V system, the G.F.C.I. must include a load

neutral out.
If the white load neutral wire is routed from the G.F.C.I.

neutral bar directly to TB1 in the system box, then the G.F.C.I.
will trip when a 120 V device is activated.
For a detailed wiring checklist, please review the previ-

ous segment of this manual on proper G.F.C.I. wiring or the
G.F.C.I. manufacturer’s instructions.
If the wiring is correct and the G.F.C.I. will not reset, then

unplug the pump and try to reset the G.F.C.I.
If the G.F.C.I. trips again, then unplug the blower and reset

the G.F.C.I.. If the G.F.C.I. continues to trip, then do the same
procedure for the ozone generator.
If the G.F.C.I. stops tripping after you unplugged one of the

spa’s components, turn off the power to the spa then plug in
each component except the one that tripped the G.F.C.I.
Power up the system. If the G.F.C.I. no longer trips, then you

have correctly identified the problem.
Repair or replace the component as instructed by the spa

manufacturer.
If you have unplugged all of the spa’s components and the

G.F.C.I. still doesn’t reset, then the problem is most likely a
ground fault in the heater.

TO DISCONNECT THE HEATER

First, turn off the main circuit breaker, then remove both

heater straps or wires from the system heater output, not
the heater itself.
After restoring the power, try to reset the G.F.C.I. again. If it

no longer trips after the system calls for heat, then replace
the heater.
If the G.F.C.I. still trips, look for pinched or shorted wires at

the transformer. Make sure that the screws that attach the
transformer to the system box have not pinched or damaged
the insulation of the transformer wires.
If the transformer wires are undamaged, check for any other

pinched wires. Refer to the wiring diagram to verify the
correct wiring of the control system.
If everything looks to be in perfect working order, then the

G.F.C.I. may be defective.

Keep in mind that a majority of G.F.C.I. tripping problems can be attributed to incorrect wiring. G.F.C.I. troubleshooting
usually finds the problem.

Ground-Fault Circuit

Interrupter/Circuit

Breaker (G.F.C.I.)

WARNING: THE OWNER SHOULD TEST AND RESET
THE G.F.C.I. ON A REGULAR BASIS TO VERIFY ITS
FUNCTION.

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