No, an overload or power-source issue has never been the problem. GFCIs do 
not trip on over-current. Only circuit breakers and fuses do that. GFCI's 
only trip when the hot and neutral currents don't exactly match (which is 
what happens when there is leakage to ground, possibly through a person). 
Many posts here confuse the two functions and and bring up overload in 
response to GFCI trips. The two are completely unrelated. 

On Sunday, March 9, 2014 6:16:54 PM UTC-7, MRQ wrote:
>
> In addition to that, It probably tripped if your power source can't 
> provide enough power.
>

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