Mike31154
New member
Thank you for your insights Mike - I will look into that book. I also skimmed over the costs of an inspection and it was around $250 I think for having an inspector come to a home.
The GFI outlets I have are Pass & Seymound / Legrand.
The compression plate fitting you mention is on both hot/neutral. The ground is the only one with a screw terminal. Do they sell GFI outlets that have the ground as a compression plate fitting too?
Not sure to be honest. Most of the GFIs I've installed at my place are Leviton. I don't have one handy to confirm, but from the diagram on the instruction sheet, it looks like they have the green screw for ground like yours does. However, the diagram also shows a 'backwire' grounding hole for 'bare copper or green wire'. Most newer receptacles these days all have these 'backwire' holes to push the wire into, but inspectors don't like you to use them, why I have no idea, something about not being a solid enough connection perhaps. If that's the case, why is anyone allowed to sell the damned things that way? How do they get CSA approval? Your guess is as good as mine.
With respect to using a black wire for the ground, to the best of my knowledge in British Columbia, it is acceptable to "paint" the wire insulation green somewhere close to the connection in order to denote its function. Tape or any other marking method is not acceptable I think because it comes off too easy. IMO, anyone who has half a clue will realize that a wire connected to a green grounding screw is most likely the ground wire, regardless of colour. Chances are, at the other end it's also quite obvious. But an inspector will crucify you for not identifying it properly and if he finds something like that, he will get much more nosy on your other work, to the point where you may have to tear everything apart again. I'd guess the codes between provinces only vary slightly, they're all based on the NEC, National Electric Code & I can't see why there would be major difference between provinces, but that's just a guess, every level of government below the Feds likes to have their little kingdom.