When I plug a high powered (1200W) device into my new GFCI outlet the GF circuit pops after 3 or 4 minutes. It does not pop if I plug the same device into a downstream outlet fed by the load terminals. It does not pop with smaller devices. This happens with a hair dryer and with a space heater.
Any ideas on how to diagnose this?
Some additional detail:
At first I blamed the hair dryer. I thought it might be faulty, or wet or something related to the additional GF breaker in its plug. But the problem also occurs with a space heater that has a plastic chassis, a two-pin plug without its own GFI, sitting on a ceramic tile floor with nobody touching it. It's hard to imagine how a current imbalance would occur with that one. The very strange thing is that it only occurs when the device is plugged directly into the GFCI outlet, not the downstream load ones, and it occurs reliably after a few minutes. Almost as if it's "heating up" although it's not hot to the touch. It resets and pops again quickly unless I let it rest a while.
It's brand new, an Eaton SGF20 on a 20A circuit. The hair dryer is 9A, the heater is 12. (I'm not using the at the same time obviously.) With smaller devices plugged in (maybe 1A) it runs forever.
Adding some test results further to comments in Harper's answer
Temperature scan of outlet before use is 78.8F :
After 6 minutes of use with a hair dryer and about 3 seconds after the GFCI trips, socket temp is 96.3. I attempted to measure the pin temperature of the plug, it was 88-ish but harder to capture with this device and only two hands. The body of the GFCI plug and the power cord were also in the mid to high eighties.
Note Within margin of error of my measurements we could have a 20 degree rise, which could be a trigger for the device's "self tests". Waiting for callback from Eaton.

