nuts4coke
Member
The FNG here... I have questions.
I've built a shed/garage in my back yard and am to the point of hiring an electrician to wire it for 240. I plan on running a two stage Ingersoll-Rand compressor as well as have a 220volt Miller MIG welder at the ready. I want to have it insulated and a heating/cooling window air conditioner installed.
Shed is 16'x24', with a pedestrian door and garage door. Approximately ten 110 outlets on two separate circuits and one or two 220 outlets (for welder, etc). One ceiling fan, and four "two-bulb" fluorescent lighting fixtures hanging. The lights will be controlled by two switches, one at the garage door and one at the pedestrian door. There will also be one outside light controlled by a switch, and the fan by a switch.
The main box on the outside of my house has six connections (breakers) and is full, so the electrician will put in a sub-panel (?) next to it and move one of the breakers over and use the empty slot to channel the power over to the sub panel.
It is approximately 125 feet from panel to shed where service will enter the shed. I added ten feet for good measure to account for trenching and running wire down from shed power panel to in-ground conduit and from new sub panel to in-ground conduit. So, 135 feet total.
I live in Northwest Florida, have sandy soil, and am planning on "trenching" this Saturday to 28" for the conduit.
Here are my questions.
1) what gauge or type of wire should the electrician be using? He mentioned "one ought" during his initial visit which I'm assuming is #1/0? Is this correct? I've seen several things here on the forum indicating wire like XHHW-2, or #2 AL, even 2-2-2-4... for sheds, etc.... And being the novice, I'm confused. He quoted me over $850 just in wiring (he rough measured 115 feet, versus my exact 135 feet) which he said was quote "100 amp direct burial" and said its $7.75 per foot. I'm looking at all the forum stuff on these different wires mentioned above and seems I can get 500 foot rolls for that kind of money at the big retail places (Lowes, Home Depot). Shocked the hell outta me.
That being said, here's my second question...
2) what size conduit should I use for your recommended wire? I know he (the electrician) says its direct burial, but he's told me we're putting it in conduit. So, based on other forum posts here I'm thinking 1-1/2"? (One and a half inch PVC?)
So he quoted me $200 for the shed work, $300 for the shed panel, and $880 for the wire.
Call me crazy, but red flags are flying everywhere here. $1400 for 240 service 135 feet away?
Please give me your input, recommendations, etc.
Also, if you have questions, ask them and I will try to answer. Ya know, I'm an electronics technician for the Air Force, and it's funny how a good majority of my knowledge on this doesn't translate. I'm a duck out of water. Thank you in advance...
Note: I can provide pictures if needed.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I've built a shed/garage in my back yard and am to the point of hiring an electrician to wire it for 240. I plan on running a two stage Ingersoll-Rand compressor as well as have a 220volt Miller MIG welder at the ready. I want to have it insulated and a heating/cooling window air conditioner installed.
Shed is 16'x24', with a pedestrian door and garage door. Approximately ten 110 outlets on two separate circuits and one or two 220 outlets (for welder, etc). One ceiling fan, and four "two-bulb" fluorescent lighting fixtures hanging. The lights will be controlled by two switches, one at the garage door and one at the pedestrian door. There will also be one outside light controlled by a switch, and the fan by a switch.
The main box on the outside of my house has six connections (breakers) and is full, so the electrician will put in a sub-panel (?) next to it and move one of the breakers over and use the empty slot to channel the power over to the sub panel.
It is approximately 125 feet from panel to shed where service will enter the shed. I added ten feet for good measure to account for trenching and running wire down from shed power panel to in-ground conduit and from new sub panel to in-ground conduit. So, 135 feet total.
I live in Northwest Florida, have sandy soil, and am planning on "trenching" this Saturday to 28" for the conduit.
Here are my questions.
1) what gauge or type of wire should the electrician be using? He mentioned "one ought" during his initial visit which I'm assuming is #1/0? Is this correct? I've seen several things here on the forum indicating wire like XHHW-2, or #2 AL, even 2-2-2-4... for sheds, etc.... And being the novice, I'm confused. He quoted me over $850 just in wiring (he rough measured 115 feet, versus my exact 135 feet) which he said was quote "100 amp direct burial" and said its $7.75 per foot. I'm looking at all the forum stuff on these different wires mentioned above and seems I can get 500 foot rolls for that kind of money at the big retail places (Lowes, Home Depot). Shocked the hell outta me.
That being said, here's my second question...
2) what size conduit should I use for your recommended wire? I know he (the electrician) says its direct burial, but he's told me we're putting it in conduit. So, based on other forum posts here I'm thinking 1-1/2"? (One and a half inch PVC?)
So he quoted me $200 for the shed work, $300 for the shed panel, and $880 for the wire.
Call me crazy, but red flags are flying everywhere here. $1400 for 240 service 135 feet away?
Please give me your input, recommendations, etc.
Also, if you have questions, ask them and I will try to answer. Ya know, I'm an electronics technician for the Air Force, and it's funny how a good majority of my knowledge on this doesn't translate. I'm a duck out of water. Thank you in advance...
Note: I can provide pictures if needed.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Last edited: