Hello,
Recently, to make better use of some of the space in my garage, I moved our antique Coldspot freezer from an off the garage storage closet with a non-gcfi outlet, to the main area of the garage with a gcfi outlet. I plugged it in and it ran for about a week without incident.
Just before I went on a business trip, I noticed that the frost seemed thick in the freezer, so I unloaded it, unplugged it, and left it open to defrost while I was gone. It stayed unplugged for a little over 1 week.
When I tried to plug it back in yesterday, it tripped the circuit protection on the gcfi outlet. I checked to make sure there were no breaks in the freezer's cord, nor the extension cord I have to use with it, and there were none. There was no moisture in the area.
Are those outlets designed to trip at a certain voltage regardless of ground conditions? The freezer's not in perfect shape, but it worked for us for three trouble-free years and for my wife's grandmother at least 30 years prior to that. It's no less than 50 years old. This is frustrating cause I want to be able to use it some more. Any suggestions are welcome and appreciated.
Thank you,
William Killeffer
East Ridge, TN
Recently, to make better use of some of the space in my garage, I moved our antique Coldspot freezer from an off the garage storage closet with a non-gcfi outlet, to the main area of the garage with a gcfi outlet. I plugged it in and it ran for about a week without incident.
Just before I went on a business trip, I noticed that the frost seemed thick in the freezer, so I unloaded it, unplugged it, and left it open to defrost while I was gone. It stayed unplugged for a little over 1 week.
When I tried to plug it back in yesterday, it tripped the circuit protection on the gcfi outlet. I checked to make sure there were no breaks in the freezer's cord, nor the extension cord I have to use with it, and there were none. There was no moisture in the area.
Are those outlets designed to trip at a certain voltage regardless of ground conditions? The freezer's not in perfect shape, but it worked for us for three trouble-free years and for my wife's grandmother at least 30 years prior to that. It's no less than 50 years old. This is frustrating cause I want to be able to use it some more. Any suggestions are welcome and appreciated.
Thank you,
William Killeffer
East Ridge, TN
Comment