^^^^^. This is the best way to diagnose whether it is the tank equipment or the house wiring/breakerRun an extension cord from a GFCI on a known good circuit; if the gfci or breaker trips at well under 15A load, the equipment is suspicious!
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^^^^^. This is the best way to diagnose whether it is the tank equipment or the house wiring/breakerRun an extension cord from a GFCI on a known good circuit; if the gfci or breaker trips at well under 15A load, the equipment is suspicious!
These are the GFCI outlets. They are in the sump and it’s impossible to work on them without taking out the sump and redoing the plumbing.
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I can either do that or just add new outlets on top where the lights are connected to.
Basically, the breaker panel had 3 different wiring in one switch (I’m totally butchering the explanation, he’s sending the full report soon)
All the GFCI below the tank are interconnected which makes them basically wired into each other = bad job.
The breaker panel is super old as well. We will be fixing these issues.
Again, my explanations are absolute crud. I’ll post the full explanations once I get the email.
Fair enough(100% correct). But I said,Creative, but not really applicable. Any competent electrician would start by checking voltages at the panel and receptacles. Line-to-line, line-to-neutral, neutral-to-ground, etc.
Depending on what they find, they would also check at the meter socket or in some cases as far upstream as the bugs (connectors) on the service drop. Depending on AHJ that may or may not be the utilities responsibility.
Thermal imaging might find a hot spot but it's not a primary diagnostic tool for residential single phase systems. In fact, I would not trust a general electrician that took one out of the toolbox before a meter.
But, the OP has no electrical background. They should not be probing receptacles, rewiring outlets, or pulling panel covers based on advice from a forum. It is a quick way to win a Darwin Award.
This needs an in person evaluation by a licensed electrician :)
.the only way for op to figure this out safely


It sounds like two branch circuits were improperly interconnected. That can cause strange and dangerous behavior -- ike voltage fluctuations, tripping from shared neutrals on opposite legs, or overloaded conductors. It sounds like the electrical system is a mess.so only voltage issues on that circuit? The others in the house were fine?
Now we know why the guy who likely installed it, aka electrician who wanted nothing to do with it, got outta there so quick.It sounds like two branch circuits were improperly interconnected. That can cause strange and dangerous behavior -- ike voltage fluctuations, tripping from shared neutrals on opposite legs, or overloaded conductors. It sounds like the electrical system is a mess.
The breakers did what they were supposed to do, but miswired circuits like this can be lethal. If two circuits share a neutral incorrectly, and the load imbalance exceeds the wire’s capacity, you can have sustained overheating without ever tripping a breaker.
The electrician we currently had didn’t install this. He’s just the guy we called for whenever we needed help.Now we know why the guy who likely installed it, aka electrician who wanted nothing to do with it, got outta there so quick.
Guy knew he messed it up. I wonder how many years ago his business insurance expired.

Yes, it is common for multiple receptacles to be on one breaker, but your code citations are not correct.It is common for there to be multiple outlets on one breaker. Most houses are like this. Code specifies that each room is fed from two different breakers, so if you have four outlets in a room, two or three might be on one breaker, and one or two might be on another. I don't know if GFCI outlets are required to be on a separate breaker. I don't know why they would be since the purpose of the GFCI is to shut off power to that outlet.
Make sure and have him upgrade your new breakers to gfci and arc fault. Believe he will anyways as that’s code in my area at least.Here’s his report:
After my Inspection I notice that the circuits are not independent and they only griping went the 2 circuits are working, the circuits have GFCI concrete serial and these is part of the problem too.
The 2 circuits are in deferents lines and these generate the tripping because in some point of the wiring the 2 lines touch each other.
I replace one circuit and now the 2 circuits are in the same line and know they don’t trip but they have voltage problems.
Part of the problem is the breakers are to old and lose and the final solution is run 2 new circuits because the outlets are Behind the tank piping and not accessible.
I think most areas require it even if they’re still enforcing older NEC editions. AFCI has been in the code since around 2008 and has expanded with nearly every revision since.Make sure and have him upgrade your new breakers to gfci and arc fault. Believe he will anyways as that’s code in my area at least.
Ya but depends if this guy plans on pulling permits etc and doing it correctly. Why I suggest asking this. If not red flag immediately.I think most areas require it even if they’re still enforcing older NEC editions. AFCI has been in the code since around 2008 and has expanded with nearly every revision since.
GFCI requirements are pre 2000 for sure and expanded significantly since then, to almost universal by maybe 2018. I would bet most AHJs in Florida are already enforcing at least 2020, if not 2023.
Here are the photos he took of our panelsMake sure and have him upgrade your new breakers to gfci and arc fault. Believe he will anyways as that’s code in my area at least.
Is your panel outside!?!? Man that’s a lot of rust/galvanic corrosionHere are the photos he took of our panels
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Can you tell me what I should ask them to do? I’m a little bit confused. Anyway, the supervisor is coming tomorrow and we will discuss exactly what needs to be done. The more info I have to tell them what to do, the better.

It’s in the garage. Not outside.Is your panel outside!?!? Man that’s a lot of rust/galvanic corrosion![]()