I have also read that a bad water heater element can cause this to happen. I did get a chance to check the electric water heater yesterday and it never even warmed the water so if that's it or not I'll need to replace it. The gas works fine.
Dega500 wrote: I installed a new water heater element when I got home from work and so far so good. The TT has been plugged in to a home GFI circuit for a little over an hour and the GFI has not tripped. I also bought a little GFI circuit tester and all plugs inside and outside of the TT check good and wired correctly.
I had that happen to me before.. It would be fine at the campground, but at home, it would pop the GFCI. After I unplugged the water heater's 110v everything was fine, so I figured out I blew the element and replaced it.
- Ken
2010 Toyota Tundra 5.7 CrewMax Limited, TRD Swaybar, Timbrens, Bilstein HD shocks
2012 Keystone Sprinter 272BHS
Reese DC Sway, Fastway Flip, Tekonsha P3
Yamaha 2400iSHC Generator
Built a new garage ourselves last summer, had the electrician ( I don't touch power unless it's putting in a new ceiling fixture) wire 2 30 amp boxes in, real handy as we park trailer right next to garage in the off season.
Randy & Joanne & Cheeko the Blue Fronted Amazon parrot
'11 KZ Spree 323CSS
2005 F150 4x4XLT 3.73
2012 Canam Outlander 800R Max XT-P
2012 Canam Outlander 800R XMR
I installed a new water heater element when I got home from work and so far so good. The TT has been plugged in to a home GFI circuit for a little over an hour and the GFI has not tripped. I also bought a little GFI circuit tester and all plugs inside and outside of the TT check good and wired correctly.