Ok. I have a question for you guys, and I hope I'm not about to be beat to oblivion for any of this, I just haven't come into a situation like this before. In my style of installation, I would've had a main breaker running to a 60A sub panel at the equipment pad. I guess it was cheaper to run a god awful number of #12 through the 3/4" conduit. The "T" that splits from the main wiring and sends the pool light cord to the light has water in it. It's either pool water or rain water. I believe it's rain water unless a cannonball can send a concussive wave through conduit that's behind a light. Anyway, I drilled a hole in the bottom of the "C" condulet that I made my splices in because I don't want water standing in it. It has remained dry for the last 2 days while I've worked on my pool light. Please note that that is going to be replaced soon, so limit the flaming on that aspect of the wiring. The question I have is related to the gfci on the pool light. The trip button doesn't cause it to trip. I think it did last year, but I wouldn't bet $5 on it. I plan to buy a new breaker because it could just be the breaker. One interesting thing in this wiring mess is the fact that they have wire nuts in the panel board between the neutral pigtail on the gfci breaker and the neutral bus bar, and the wire at the equipment pad is not white, as it should be, and is at the panel board, but it is red. I have 3 sets of red and black wires. Two are 240v for the pool pump and booster pump, and the last set is 120v for the light. Anyway, super long question short, what are the chances that the breaker button is just bad? Oh, and as a little more fun, all the equipment was installed with gfci breakers, and the previous owner, I believe at the direction of the pool builder, swapped them for regular breakers since the gfci breakers kept tripping. P.S. I HATE people that do this ****!
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