You're a powerful pack of stupid. I didn't say microwaves light on fire if they aren't protected by a GFCI. I actually said pretty much the opposite. Microwaves should NOT be on GFCI circuits. If they are, they are liable to start a fire in your walls. I'm basing that on what the electrician told me when I lived it. We had one plugged into a regular counter circuit. He said the GFCI circuit masked the over current being caused by the microwave and other appliances and allowed the wires to heat up too much for long periods of time. Eventually, they got too melty and failed spectacularly. He said he'd seen the same thing happen before and burn the house down. We were lucky and probably saved by the house only being a few years old.Holy shit, how did I miss this gem. This is wrong on almost every conceivable level. You are confusing overdrawing current (coincidentally what circuit breakers and fuses control which would ideally be EVERY outlet) and ground faults (what a GFCI protects against). Microwaves do NOT just light on fire if they are not protected by a GFCI, JTFC.
It's possible the real problem was simply that it wasn't a dedicated circuit, but I figure there's a reason that builders put in non GFCI circuits above the stove for microwaves. Either way, my point stands that you should not simply plug the microwave into another circuit.
Oh and I was wrong that it's not only Microwave circuits. Apparently Fridges, dishwashers, stoves, and ovens can be on dedicated non GFCI circuits too if the manufacturer calls for it or calls for a dedicated circuit.
Not so fast. We need pics first to prove your story.I won? I feel so special!