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AFCI Protection (Refrigerators)


Rob Amaral

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That's interesting.  Refrigerators have thermostats that switch the compressor on and off, and relays at the compressor terminal box that switch the start capacitor in and out of circuit.  Switches generate arcs.  Maybe the AFCI circuitry is designed to ignore these refrigerator arcs but this arcing can change as these parts age.  I can see AFCI's tripping when the appliance becomes older yet still works and ruining a great deal of food.

Edited by Marc
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I have first hand experience with afcis nuisance tripping. Brand new house, broke ground 5/16. There are 8 duplex in the garage gfci protected at the first receptacle and afci protected at the breaker. The start cap on my table saw would trip the afci about once every 20 starts. My brand new circular saw never tripped it.

Same house the bedrooms are protected with afci receptacles. My circular saw tripped each of them every time.

Different house 1 year older, afci breakers tripped every time halogen lights were turned on, and with high frequency when running a Kirby vacuum.

 

 

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The codes need an adjustment to accommodate high wattage HID lamps and consumer power tools that use  brush/commutator motors like Toms's.

HIDs ( high pressure sodium, mercury vapor, metal halide) and fluorescents all generate sparks.  It's just the big ones that trip AFCI's, as per Jim.

Tom, does that table saw have a capacitor on it?  Mine does, no brushes.  Turning the thing on and off does generate arcs though, big ones, because it's a sizable motor.

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16 hours ago, Tom Raymond said:

Plug in halogen work light. No shared neutrals.

If you have the opportunity and the time, it might be interesting to wire the Kirby and the work light directly to the AFCI breaker to eliminate other variables in the household wiring. 

Also, do you know the brand of AFCIs that were doing this? 

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  • 1 year later...

Remodeled kitchen and electrician had to install new AFCI/GFCI Siemens circuit breakers to comply with code. Now my 8 yr old Samsung 24 cu ft refrigerator trips the c/b every 12 minutes to as long as 4 days. Tried space heater on circuit and no problem. Plugged refrigerator into other AFCI/GFCI and they also trip but not as often. Refrigerator works fine on dining room non-GFCI circuit. Have spoken to appliance repair and Samsung service people and all say waste of time to come out and check refrigerator. They all say refrigerators should not be on GFCI. Spoke to city elect inspector and he said, sorry but code is code. Seems to be a catch-22 here.

Edited by jacbec
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19 hours ago, jacbec said:

Remodeled kitchen and electrician had to install new AFCI/GFCI Siemens circuit breakers to comply with code. Now my 8 yr old Samsung 24 cu ft refrigerator trips the c/b every 12 minutes to as long as 4 days. Tried space heater on circuit and no problem. Plugged refrigerator into other AFCI/GFCI and they also trip but not as often. Refrigerator works fine on dining room non-GFCI circuit. Have spoken to appliance repair and Samsung service people and all say waste of time to come out and check refrigerator. They all say refrigerators should not be on GFCI. Spoke to city elect inspector and he said, sorry but code is code. Seems to be a catch-22 here.

All refrigerators have a start relay that generates sparks but I wold imagine that the AFCI circuitry would have been engineered to disregard such sparks.  There may be something else going on that causing the tripping.

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On 11/22/2018 at 9:33 AM, jacbec said:

Have spoken to appliance repair and Samsung service people and all say waste of time to come out and check refrigerator. They all say refrigerators should not be on GFCI. 

1

*They* are wrong with regard to GFCIs. Plain & simple.

The UL standard for refrigerators requires them to have current leakage at or below .05mA. Modern GFCIs will not trip below 4mA. If a fridge is tripping a GFCI, it’s leaking *at least* 8 times as much current as it should. Your appliance people simply have no room for argument here.

I’m a little less sanguine about AFCIs. They’re often squirrely devices and I don’t have a lot of confidence in their ability to weed out “normal” arcing.

My suggestion is a bit irregular, but might be helpful. Try swapping out the Siemens AFCI/GFCI for a Square D (Homeline) or an Eaton one and see what happens. Each of these three brands is a little bit different from the others and you might find a sweet spot with one of them.  If so, you might have to live with a non-brand-matching breaker in your panel, which is technically incorrect, but probably better than living without the GFCI/AFCI protection, which seems like your only other choice, short of a new fridge.

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  • 6 months later...
On 11/23/2018 at 7:49 AM, Marc said:

All refrigerators have a start relay that generates sparks but I wold imagine that the AFCI circuitry would have been engineered to disregard such sparks.  There may be something else going on that causing the tripping.

 

On 6/22/2017 at 8:56 AM, Marc said:

That's interesting.  Refrigerators have thermostats that switch the compressor on and off, and relays at the compressor terminal box that switch the start capacitor in and out of circuit.  Switches generate arcs.  Maybe the AFCI circuitry is designed to ignore these refrigerator arcs but this arcing can change as these parts age.  I can see AFCI's tripping when the appliance becomes older yet still works and ruining a great deal of food.

Marc, 

I live in Upstate NY where AFCI is required. I have a newer fridge (circa 2014), it's an LG, and trips anywhere from every 12seconds to every 3 days, very similar to the user who had a Samsung above.  I've now had several local electricians tell me to swap out the outlet for a one plug traditional outlet, so as to dedicate this outlet for the fridge safeguarding other appliances from being used here. What are your thoughts on this? I have heard that AFCI's are more sensitive than GFCI's, would a GFCI be a better option than nothing? Would an AFCI or GFCI breaker in the panel be better than having outlet control (my thought here is that the added resistance of the increased wire length may prevent these nuisance trips due to false arc readings from the compressor or LED panel).

Thanks in advance for your opinions!

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16 hours ago, JJduro said:

I have heard that AFCI's are more sensitive than GFCI's, would a GFCI be a better option than nothing? 

They're two different devices that do two different things. One isn't "more sensitive" than the other. That said, AFCIs do contain some GFCI protection, but the threshold is 30mA while the threshold of a GFCI is only 6mA so *with regard to ground faults only* GFCIs are far more sensitive than AFCIs. Otherwise, one detects arcs and the other detects ground faults. (By the way, a 30mA ground fault that goes through you is quite painful, if not lethal.) 

16 hours ago, JJduro said:

would a GFCI be a better option than nothing?

A GFCI would protect you from being shocked by ground faults. An AFCI would protect the circuit from catching the house on fire. Two different things. 

16 hours ago, JJduro said:

Would an AFCI or GFCI breaker in the panel be better than having outlet control (my thought here is that the added resistance of the increased wire length may prevent these nuisance trips due to false arc readings from the compressor or LED panel).

Wire length has nothing to do with the operation of either device. 

If you just want the fridge to work, install a simplex receptacle (only one space for a plug) and get rid of the AFCI. Understand that if this circuit starts a fire, your insurance carrier might decline coverage because it doesn't meet the code. 

If you want to screw around with it, try installing a different brand of AFCI in the panel. This is *technically* not allowed, but it might work. Every manufacturer has a slightly different way of detecting arc faults and you might find that a Siemens AFCI doesn't nuisance trip where an Eaton one might. 

On the other hand, maybe your fridge is actually producing dangerous arc faults and the device is just doing what it's supposed to do. Modern refrigerators pretty much all suck. 

 

 

 

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It's sometimes a defect in the refrigerator but it's sometimes a compatibility issue between the particular refrigerator and the AFCI device.  Refrigerators have compressor-start circuits that need to be considered when an AFCI is engineered, because motor-start circuits normally generate sparks.

Refrigerators are made from parts obtained from the global market.  I doubt LG is alone in sharing this incompatibility with certain AFCI's.

What Jim said.  Provide a circuit for the refrigerator that doesn't have the AFCI protection, just regular breaker and GFCI protection.  Bear in mind, you'll be going rogue code-wise if you do this.  There may be consequences.  On the other hand, I've never had an AFCI protected refrigerator before.

Edited by Marc
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  • 6 months later...

My AFCI did trip on my refrigerator and ruined all the food in it.  So, yes it is a problem.  The AFCI is only a few months old,  my refrgerator still works perfectly, a whirlpool.  I'm going to change out the breaker (20 Amp) for a regular one and put in a GFI receptacle on it and damn the code.  I can't keep losing food.

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On 6/19/2019 at 12:25 AM, Jim Katen said:

 

"On the other hand, maybe your fridge is actually producing dangerous arc faults and the device is just doing what it's supposed to do. Modern refrigerators pretty much all suck."

A friend bought a new fridge last year and the salesman told him it was not a very good one.  So why are you selling it to me?

Salesman: I don't have any good ones for sale!

 

 

 

Edited by Jim Baird
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