I recently purchased an instant hot water heater. They get around using 10ga wire by utilizing two hots and a ground on a dual pole 15amp breaker over standard 14/2
I was advised to use a Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter breaker. However those breakers normally require you to connect a neutral directly to it and have a small neutral pigtail that goes to the main neutral bus.
An electrician I spoke with stated to simply connect the two hots, the ground, the neutral pigtail, and not to worry about the direct neutral connection on the breaker.
Is this correct and if so will it still offer GFCI protection? If not I may as well save some money and use a regular 2 pole breaker.
Thanks in advance for your input.
Cheers
Best Answer
We went through this in a discussion about using North American GFCI breakers in Europlaces where power is 240V only. Turns out the breaker itself needs neutral for its internal bits. But actually, your connection advice is nothing more than the standard advice for hooking up any GFCI.
First, hook up the
LINE
side of the GFCIOn a breaker, the 240V GFCI gets its two "hots" when it clips in place and contacts the two bus bars. That was easy.
Neutral, however, is a little trickier: you need to connect the neutral pigtail to the neutral bus. Aside from some plug-on-neutral panels that I don't much like, neutral is not available as a "rail" that the breaker can just clip onto.
Second, test for correct operation
Now that the GFCI is fully powered, you light it up and run it through its paces. In this case that means hitting "Test" a few times and resetting it.
Third, hook up the
LOAD
sideNow with the GFCI checked out, you attach loads. On a GFCI breaker, the
LOAD
terminals basically are the ordinary output lugs every breaker has, except there's an extra one for the neutral.Every conductor must attach to the GFCI, so if it was a split-phase load like a dryer, all 3 conductors would go to the GFCI.
However in your case, you only have the two hots, so those go to the two "hot" terminals on the breaker. And you're done.
But I would talk to your AHJ (Authority Having Jurisdiction, or permit issuer/inspector) and see if a GFCI breaker is really necessary for a hard-wired, hard-plumbed heater. I don't think it is, but local codes vary.