RobertN
Super Member
Went out this morning, and power to our spa was off. Checked the breaker, and reset it. Spa still did not come on. It is a GFCI breaker, 40A 220v. With the breaker set to "on", I tried the "test" button. It did not trip the breaker.
I pulled the diconnect next to the spa, to take the spa out of the cicuit. Still no power(measured voltage with DVM) at the disconnect. I tried measuring right at the breaker panel, and found no voltage. I tried shutting down electricity, and disconnected the wires going from the breaker to the spa. Turned power on, but still no voltage on the output of the breaker... Reset the breaker again just for luck, but to no avail.
I shut down electricity again, and removed the breaker from the panel. With the breaker in the "on" position, I can ohm out across the input and output for each leg. Both measure 0-ohms(closed circuit). If I measure across the two input or output legs, I get 5.5M-ohms(an open, which I would expect. Don't want the two legs of the breaker shorted together...).
There is a white wire that comes out of the breaker, and gets connected to the nuetral junction in the breaker panel. If I ohm from it to either pole of the breaker, I get 5.5M-ohms.
This is a dedicated 220v circuit just for the spa.
Is there anything else I can check? The breaker does not work when powered up, but ohms out fine when out of the circuit. I am not sure how to debug it with the GFCI portion in the equation...
Do breakers just go bad? This breaker is about 5 years old, and as a GFCI, was pretty spendy(I think it was about $125).
I pulled the diconnect next to the spa, to take the spa out of the cicuit. Still no power(measured voltage with DVM) at the disconnect. I tried measuring right at the breaker panel, and found no voltage. I tried shutting down electricity, and disconnected the wires going from the breaker to the spa. Turned power on, but still no voltage on the output of the breaker... Reset the breaker again just for luck, but to no avail.
I shut down electricity again, and removed the breaker from the panel. With the breaker in the "on" position, I can ohm out across the input and output for each leg. Both measure 0-ohms(closed circuit). If I measure across the two input or output legs, I get 5.5M-ohms(an open, which I would expect. Don't want the two legs of the breaker shorted together...).
There is a white wire that comes out of the breaker, and gets connected to the nuetral junction in the breaker panel. If I ohm from it to either pole of the breaker, I get 5.5M-ohms.
This is a dedicated 220v circuit just for the spa.
Is there anything else I can check? The breaker does not work when powered up, but ohms out fine when out of the circuit. I am not sure how to debug it with the GFCI portion in the equation...
Do breakers just go bad? This breaker is about 5 years old, and as a GFCI, was pretty spendy(I think it was about $125).