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Arc fault breakers at the panel are better yet.
Randy - I'm unsure why an afci would be preferable for av equipment in lieu of a gfci. A gfci protects against shocks (even in the absence of a proper safety ground) by checking for any imbalance of power flow between hot and neutral and an afci protects against low power arcing which causes fires due to frayed/faulty cords. There might well be effective combo units, but one does not substitute for the other.
When I was talking safety, I was worried about arcs, but burning my house down. But, since the combo breakers are so expensive, I was thinking about using afci breakers for my garage, and bedrooms, then use gfci outlets where I really need to shock protection. I had some outlets installed outside a few years ago, and the guy did not use gfci outlets, so I will change at least those, and probably the ones in my garage too.
Wow, a professional didn't install GFCI protected outlets outside? If he didn't run a new circuit maybe he daisy chained them off an existing GFCI (garage or kitchen maybe)?Just keep in mind that for DIY safety a GFCI isn't foolproof. I'm pretty sure that if you hit something after the secondaries on a transformer its not really going to help. Of course even a tiny bit of added safety is worth it so I do all my testing on GFCI outlets too.
Go ahead and shoot me for saying the obvious, but I'm assuming you understand that slave outlets are usually "daisy chained" to a single GFI protected circuit? You don't need one everywhere.