> just in case, some of your electronics do not like the GFI.
On the one hand, most stuff that "does not like GFI" is defective, should be fixed or replaced.
Large (>1/2HP) motors are a traditional exception, because of the high starting current (>40A). This requires 1000:1 balance of the lines to avoid crossing the 50mA short-term trip of a US GFI. Some older wires (and GFIs) were not that perfect. Yet I have been running large motors on GFIs, no problem except when a plug was in the mud (then it should trip!).
That said.... I just took one device off a GFI and I am thinking about another.
The furnace quit. It drips (condensing) so has a small pump to lift the condensate out of the cellar. The pump was dead. I'd wired it to kill furnace before it overflowed on the floor. Furnace was non-GFI but pump was GFI. Random trip? Annoying, and there isn't that much danger (pump is all plastic). I moved the pump to a non-GFI outlet. (Still have GFI right-there for worker power tools.)
The internet went out. The modem-thing is in the cellar, so GFI had seemed wise. But I had been working around it, the plug overlaps the test button, and apparently I had bumped it enough to trip-out the GFI and kill the internet. For now I use a different plug, but I just may mount a network-only non-GFI outlet high in the joists, where it can't be used casually for lamps or vacuums. Leave the existing GFI where it is (chest level) for those things.