So... when the ground is unfrozen, I plan to trench to the garage.
Right now, I have 15amps, total, in my 1952 22x23. that is: 1 x 15a 120v And that's on an arc fault breaker that is kind of trippy.
I want 50amps. Actually watts would make more sense to rate panels by, no? Watts = heat, right and I feel "heat/load" must have some relvence to the max a panel can take? I bring this up because 2 of the new circuits would be 240V.
I **** at electrical as its terminology is, more than most trades, super specific, and because my Dad who I didn't have a great relationship with in the 2nd half of his life, was an electrician, so I had less reason to learn. Might argue less opportunity, too, though that's b/c of the relationship, and could certainly be put "on me".
Anyway, the 240V circuits I am thinking of would be each ~25-30a@240v, namely supplemental heating/weld /possible electric car charger for future, as I hope to be in this house 20+y...and seems wise to future proof.
I have a brand new 150a panel and feed from municipal, in the house. Just passed inspection last fall after a full to the studs/redo the floor plan/redo all utilities gut and remodel, so thankfully, not dealing with old/inadequate stuff
House is 2100 Sq feet fully developed with 5 bedrooms (2 in rental suite.. so potentially 5- 6, even 7+ persons living here). Gas water heater. 2 stoves, electric clothes dryer.
There are 4 empty slots on the panel, which is great.
In the garage, if I utilize 2 of 3 of those new 240V options at any one time, I'm at 50-60amps- plus lighting @ ~8-10a, plus a 15a tool or vaccum. Welding would be only light-moderate automotive and homeowner stuff, so probably lowest of the three. Should I plan for more than 60Amp capable?
Aside from actually triggering the main panel breaker, is there a code question raised in devoting 60 or say even 75 amps out to the new garage subpanel? Esp considering that a lot of it is 240V (more watts)?
Properly made connections to the buss in the panel should produce no heat, but I'm trying to understand what I might run into in forming a by Code Maximum when asking for this, this summer.
I can see sub panels that would appear to work fine for the garage for just $117cdn at Home Depot.
#6 Aluminum was suggested as what I'd need to run. 38-40 ft of it in 3/4" non metallic tubing in a 22 inch down trench? Odds are good I have some detail wrong there.
I may have someone that will work with me and let me do the grunt work and parts purchasing, but I don't fully trust him... not 100% sure he's ticketed. Neighbor found him for me after I had a couple electricians bail on their appointments with me for something else- we're talking bailed out over half a dozen times, same day or without even a call, over over 8 weeks each. Seems just nuts to get someone locally at any price.
Right now, I have 15amps, total, in my 1952 22x23. that is: 1 x 15a 120v And that's on an arc fault breaker that is kind of trippy.
I want 50amps. Actually watts would make more sense to rate panels by, no? Watts = heat, right and I feel "heat/load" must have some relvence to the max a panel can take? I bring this up because 2 of the new circuits would be 240V.
I **** at electrical as its terminology is, more than most trades, super specific, and because my Dad who I didn't have a great relationship with in the 2nd half of his life, was an electrician, so I had less reason to learn. Might argue less opportunity, too, though that's b/c of the relationship, and could certainly be put "on me".
Anyway, the 240V circuits I am thinking of would be each ~25-30a@240v, namely supplemental heating/weld /possible electric car charger for future, as I hope to be in this house 20+y...and seems wise to future proof.
I have a brand new 150a panel and feed from municipal, in the house. Just passed inspection last fall after a full to the studs/redo the floor plan/redo all utilities gut and remodel, so thankfully, not dealing with old/inadequate stuff
House is 2100 Sq feet fully developed with 5 bedrooms (2 in rental suite.. so potentially 5- 6, even 7+ persons living here). Gas water heater. 2 stoves, electric clothes dryer.
There are 4 empty slots on the panel, which is great.
In the garage, if I utilize 2 of 3 of those new 240V options at any one time, I'm at 50-60amps- plus lighting @ ~8-10a, plus a 15a tool or vaccum. Welding would be only light-moderate automotive and homeowner stuff, so probably lowest of the three. Should I plan for more than 60Amp capable?
Aside from actually triggering the main panel breaker, is there a code question raised in devoting 60 or say even 75 amps out to the new garage subpanel? Esp considering that a lot of it is 240V (more watts)?
Properly made connections to the buss in the panel should produce no heat, but I'm trying to understand what I might run into in forming a by Code Maximum when asking for this, this summer.
I can see sub panels that would appear to work fine for the garage for just $117cdn at Home Depot.
#6 Aluminum was suggested as what I'd need to run. 38-40 ft of it in 3/4" non metallic tubing in a 22 inch down trench? Odds are good I have some detail wrong there.
I may have someone that will work with me and let me do the grunt work and parts purchasing, but I don't fully trust him... not 100% sure he's ticketed. Neighbor found him for me after I had a couple electricians bail on their appointments with me for something else- we're talking bailed out over half a dozen times, same day or without even a call, over over 8 weeks each. Seems just nuts to get someone locally at any price.
Last edited:


