FordTruckWench
Well-known member
I'm helping friends clean up their mess of an electrical system. Right now I'm running a bigger conduit to the garage. Also, they may be getting solar panels. The solar company may take care of upgrading the main breaker panel. Or we may have to do it ourselves first. Either way, I want to spec out the replacement.
See the picture of the wholly overfilled main panel. Previously it was even worse. I've already removed a 4/3 (no ground) rubber and cloth insulation cable that went to a subpanel that doesn't exist anymore. You can see pieces of it on the shelf to the left.
The box to the left is an automatic generator transfer switch with its own subpanel. It is not designed with knockouts for a large number of circuits: There are two small ones on top, one of which goes to the generator in the flex conduit. And there is a 1 1/4 "slot out" on each side. Someone drilled an additional one on the bottom to connect the furnace. All other circuits are spliced back at the Zinsco where they contribute to the tangle.
The conduits leaving the Zinsco are (left to right):
1) Generator box
2) Water well
3) A/C and what might be the dishwasher
4) An entirely too large cable going to an R/V hookup
5) Main floor and upstairs subpanels
6) Just an earth ground - the 4/3 above was here
7) Garage
8) Pool
Several of the subpanels are Square D Homeline, so I was looking at Homeline all-in-ones. However, none of them are set up for the large number of feeders we have here. However, several variations (HOM2040M200RB, HOM1624M225RB, & etc.) of outdoor rainproof Homeline main breaker panels would work. Their enclosures 3R through 8R and 14R all have the same configuration of knockouts. They have large knockouts on the left and right sides, two on the back, and another big one centered in the bottom.
My plan:
Lower the generator box a few inches. An SE type conduit body on the left slot out could then go straight back into a floor joist cavity. The major house feeds can go through here.
Locate the new Homeline lower than the Zinsco - low enough and centered such that the back knockouts can directly lead into a floor joist cavity. (That's where the existing conduit bodies exit.) I think the crawl space vent is lined up with the floor joists.
Run a new large conduit to the garage, and a combined conduit to the well and pool.
Questions:
The gray plastic flex conduit joining the two boxes - is this readily available?
200A or 225A? I've read that 225 is recommended for solar.
See the picture of the wholly overfilled main panel. Previously it was even worse. I've already removed a 4/3 (no ground) rubber and cloth insulation cable that went to a subpanel that doesn't exist anymore. You can see pieces of it on the shelf to the left.
The box to the left is an automatic generator transfer switch with its own subpanel. It is not designed with knockouts for a large number of circuits: There are two small ones on top, one of which goes to the generator in the flex conduit. And there is a 1 1/4 "slot out" on each side. Someone drilled an additional one on the bottom to connect the furnace. All other circuits are spliced back at the Zinsco where they contribute to the tangle.
The conduits leaving the Zinsco are (left to right):
1) Generator box
2) Water well
3) A/C and what might be the dishwasher
4) An entirely too large cable going to an R/V hookup
5) Main floor and upstairs subpanels
6) Just an earth ground - the 4/3 above was here
7) Garage
8) Pool
Several of the subpanels are Square D Homeline, so I was looking at Homeline all-in-ones. However, none of them are set up for the large number of feeders we have here. However, several variations (HOM2040M200RB, HOM1624M225RB, & etc.) of outdoor rainproof Homeline main breaker panels would work. Their enclosures 3R through 8R and 14R all have the same configuration of knockouts. They have large knockouts on the left and right sides, two on the back, and another big one centered in the bottom.
My plan:
Lower the generator box a few inches. An SE type conduit body on the left slot out could then go straight back into a floor joist cavity. The major house feeds can go through here.
Locate the new Homeline lower than the Zinsco - low enough and centered such that the back knockouts can directly lead into a floor joist cavity. (That's where the existing conduit bodies exit.) I think the crawl space vent is lined up with the floor joists.
Run a new large conduit to the garage, and a combined conduit to the well and pool.
Questions:
The gray plastic flex conduit joining the two boxes - is this readily available?
200A or 225A? I've read that 225 is recommended for solar.



