I recently added 3 Pentair landscape lights and when wiring them in with the pool lights on the ET panel noticed that the breaker was not GFCI protected. I also couldn't get power to the new landscape light transformer by using a jumper wire from the pool light spot at AUX 5 to AUX 2 where I was wanting the landscape lights. So I figured I would kill two birds with one stone and swap out the breaker for a GFCI and get a breaker with two load spots and just wire directly to AUX 2 from one and plug in the other hot wire that is currently going to the GFCI outlet then to the ET transformer.
The problem came when I turned the power back on to the panel. The equipment was getting power but the ET display was blank. So I plugged the old breaker in and just used a wire nut to get power to AUX 2 and the GFCI outlet and that did the trick. I'm just nervous because I know new code requires that to be a GFCI breaker and I'm not sure where I went wrong. The old (now current) breaker is an Eaton 20a single pole and the GFCI is an Eaton BR GFCI 20a breaker. Any ideas? Here is a picture of the panel wiring with the GFCI breaker before I switched back. The electricians who connected the pool, spa, and entry lights have a 2 gang J Box, an Intermatic j box, and an intermatic 300 watt transformer wired next to each other so I suspect that might be the culprit but I can't really make sense of all the wiring they did. One thing was that the old breaker I'm now using didn't have a common wire but the GFCI one did that I wired into the common bar.
Thanks.

The problem came when I turned the power back on to the panel. The equipment was getting power but the ET display was blank. So I plugged the old breaker in and just used a wire nut to get power to AUX 2 and the GFCI outlet and that did the trick. I'm just nervous because I know new code requires that to be a GFCI breaker and I'm not sure where I went wrong. The old (now current) breaker is an Eaton 20a single pole and the GFCI is an Eaton BR GFCI 20a breaker. Any ideas? Here is a picture of the panel wiring with the GFCI breaker before I switched back. The electricians who connected the pool, spa, and entry lights have a 2 gang J Box, an Intermatic j box, and an intermatic 300 watt transformer wired next to each other so I suspect that might be the culprit but I can't really make sense of all the wiring they did. One thing was that the old breaker I'm now using didn't have a common wire but the GFCI one did that I wired into the common bar.
Thanks.
