Todd.Brock
Well-known member
I was wondering if you all could take a quick look at my load calcs and make sure that I am on the right page for a basement subpanel. This is about 600 square feet for residential use. My thought was to use #8 THHN and # 10 ground to the sub panel in pvc conduit from box to box. That would allow for 55 amps . According to fill chart, ¾” conduit will suffice for 6 conductors, but 1” will allow for 10. My thought would be a little more room is a good thing?
This is for a typical suburban two story home built in 1999 with 2 car attached garage in Cincinnati Ohio (my next door neighbor). The panel is on the outside wall of the garage. My intent was to use PVC conduit 18” deep against the side /back of the house and then through the band board into the basement. This would be approx. a 60-70 ft run with all the bends, turns, etc .
1. I do not know how to figure for not all the load being used at the same time. How do I assume for partial load, not all receptacles.
2. I would use a 50amp double pole breaker at the main panel and then use a main lug only panel for the sub. What is the rule about the grounding bars with sub panels? They have to be removed?
3. Not entirely sure how I would divide up the load yet into individual circuits. Suggestions?
Load (spec'ed from an internet site)
Minifridge (specs fullsize in case need grows) 1200w/hour
TV/Bigscreen/Entertainment center 650watts
Computer 120watts
10 can lights 6500 watts,
Microwave 1100 watts
Total of 9570watts/240v = 39.8 amps
Figure 6-8 recepticles around the room, etc.
This is for a typical suburban two story home built in 1999 with 2 car attached garage in Cincinnati Ohio (my next door neighbor). The panel is on the outside wall of the garage. My intent was to use PVC conduit 18” deep against the side /back of the house and then through the band board into the basement. This would be approx. a 60-70 ft run with all the bends, turns, etc .
1. I do not know how to figure for not all the load being used at the same time. How do I assume for partial load, not all receptacles.
2. I would use a 50amp double pole breaker at the main panel and then use a main lug only panel for the sub. What is the rule about the grounding bars with sub panels? They have to be removed?
3. Not entirely sure how I would divide up the load yet into individual circuits. Suggestions?
Load (spec'ed from an internet site)
Minifridge (specs fullsize in case need grows) 1200w/hour
TV/Bigscreen/Entertainment center 650watts
Computer 120watts
10 can lights 6500 watts,
Microwave 1100 watts
Total of 9570watts/240v = 39.8 amps
Figure 6-8 recepticles around the room, etc.