Good Evening,
I am new to the forums and posted my issue in another thread this morning. I figured I’d start my own thread in the correct spot. Here is my scenario, as posted this morning:
I started converting a PBC to electric. I purchased a 1200 watt heating element from Cookshack and a PID controller with a built in relay. Wired it all up and plugged it in. The first time the controller turned on the heating element, it instantly tripped my GFI outlet. The outlet actually broke since it was probably 20 years old. We were having issues with the same outlet tripping when our Christmas lights were up.
I put a new outlet in and tried running the smoker again. It ran for 10 minutes or so and then the GFI outlet tripped again. I tested everything I could with a multimeter and couldn’t find anything. In my internet searching, it seems that heating elements and GFI outlets don’t always play nice with one another. I’ve read stories of people having to replace every outlet on the GFI protected circuit in hopes of keeping their electric smoker from tripping the GFI. I guess GFI outlets are very conservative by design so it is easy for things to make them trip. The fact that ours was tripping with our Christmas lights up makes me think the old wiring in our house isn’t helping my cause.
If I plug mine into a non-GFI outlet, it runs like a champ. Now my dilemma is do I just chalk it off to heating elements and GFIs not playing nice and run it on an unprotected circuit (risk safety) or scrap the idea.
This afternoon I measured the voltage across my heating element and it was +/- 106 volts. The voltage going into the element is 115 volts. My resistance on the element is right around 12 ohms, which seems correct based on my math. So I’m not sure if the drop in voltage across the heating element is normal or if that could be why my GFI outlet is tripping.
I’ve been unable to troubleshoot it down to any other issues. As a side note, I have a smaller Cookshack electric smoker that I run on the same circuit without issue. The heating element in that smoker is only around 700 Watts. Not sure if that means anything.
My older Cookshack works fine but I want more space to smoke more meat at once. I don’t want to dump more money into modifying the PBC since it’s not a giant increase in usable space. I attempted to convert it to electric because I could never get used to the overwhelming charcoal flavor we got using the PBC as designed.
I’d love to make a propane smoker from scratch or find a used warmer and convert it. In the meantime, if I could get the PBC to run on electric, at least I’d have something to use now.
Any help is appreciated. Thanks.
Randy
I am new to the forums and posted my issue in another thread this morning. I figured I’d start my own thread in the correct spot. Here is my scenario, as posted this morning:
I started converting a PBC to electric. I purchased a 1200 watt heating element from Cookshack and a PID controller with a built in relay. Wired it all up and plugged it in. The first time the controller turned on the heating element, it instantly tripped my GFI outlet. The outlet actually broke since it was probably 20 years old. We were having issues with the same outlet tripping when our Christmas lights were up.
I put a new outlet in and tried running the smoker again. It ran for 10 minutes or so and then the GFI outlet tripped again. I tested everything I could with a multimeter and couldn’t find anything. In my internet searching, it seems that heating elements and GFI outlets don’t always play nice with one another. I’ve read stories of people having to replace every outlet on the GFI protected circuit in hopes of keeping their electric smoker from tripping the GFI. I guess GFI outlets are very conservative by design so it is easy for things to make them trip. The fact that ours was tripping with our Christmas lights up makes me think the old wiring in our house isn’t helping my cause.
If I plug mine into a non-GFI outlet, it runs like a champ. Now my dilemma is do I just chalk it off to heating elements and GFIs not playing nice and run it on an unprotected circuit (risk safety) or scrap the idea.
This afternoon I measured the voltage across my heating element and it was +/- 106 volts. The voltage going into the element is 115 volts. My resistance on the element is right around 12 ohms, which seems correct based on my math. So I’m not sure if the drop in voltage across the heating element is normal or if that could be why my GFI outlet is tripping.
I’ve been unable to troubleshoot it down to any other issues. As a side note, I have a smaller Cookshack electric smoker that I run on the same circuit without issue. The heating element in that smoker is only around 700 Watts. Not sure if that means anything.
My older Cookshack works fine but I want more space to smoke more meat at once. I don’t want to dump more money into modifying the PBC since it’s not a giant increase in usable space. I attempted to convert it to electric because I could never get used to the overwhelming charcoal flavor we got using the PBC as designed.
I’d love to make a propane smoker from scratch or find a used warmer and convert it. In the meantime, if I could get the PBC to run on electric, at least I’d have something to use now.
Any help is appreciated. Thanks.
Randy