BentBierz
Well-known member
Hello,
I have another circuit panel question somewhat related to the issue I had in the following thread: http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=356727.
As discussed in the above thread, I have a detached steel building that has a new circuit panel inside that is fed from the main panel at the house. The new panel (GE PowerMark TLM812SCUD) that the electrician installed in the steel building has main lugs instead of a main breaker but is convertible to a main breaker set-up. There is a 100 amp breaker installed at the main panel (soon to be a 90 amp as per the above thread).
Now to my new issue...and I can't necessarily blame this on my electrician but somewhat do...I'll take 50%-75% blame here as I had told him I would probably have 8-10 circuits once I finished out the building but, at the time, only had him install one for the sewage system sub pump. Sooo...I was reading that in a detached building if you have more than 6 breakers in the panel (i.e. it takes more than 6 hand movements to shut-off all of the breakers in the panel) than I would need not only the 90 amp breaker back at the house main panel but also a 90 amp main breaker (or some other form of disconnect) in/near my steel building panel. No problem...I'll go get the main breaker kit at Home Depot, install it and be done. The only problem is the two hots coming into the panel that are attached to the lugs have absolutely no slack in them and the way the panel is configured to convert to a main breaker requires you to use slots 1 and 3 on the upper left side of the panel. Also, it would be VERY difficult to put in some type of disconnect ahead of the panel.
The only solution that readily presents itself is to limit my circuits in the current steel building panel and run a sub panel off of this panel to another part of the building. Not something I am opposed to because this would have its own advantage for my set-up. For the electricians out there...would I still be within code compliance if my existing panel only had 6 breakers (one of them being a 50 or 60 amp breaker feeding the new subp panel)?
Sorry the set-up took so long to get to the finish!
I have another circuit panel question somewhat related to the issue I had in the following thread: http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=356727.
As discussed in the above thread, I have a detached steel building that has a new circuit panel inside that is fed from the main panel at the house. The new panel (GE PowerMark TLM812SCUD) that the electrician installed in the steel building has main lugs instead of a main breaker but is convertible to a main breaker set-up. There is a 100 amp breaker installed at the main panel (soon to be a 90 amp as per the above thread).
Now to my new issue...and I can't necessarily blame this on my electrician but somewhat do...I'll take 50%-75% blame here as I had told him I would probably have 8-10 circuits once I finished out the building but, at the time, only had him install one for the sewage system sub pump. Sooo...I was reading that in a detached building if you have more than 6 breakers in the panel (i.e. it takes more than 6 hand movements to shut-off all of the breakers in the panel) than I would need not only the 90 amp breaker back at the house main panel but also a 90 amp main breaker (or some other form of disconnect) in/near my steel building panel. No problem...I'll go get the main breaker kit at Home Depot, install it and be done. The only problem is the two hots coming into the panel that are attached to the lugs have absolutely no slack in them and the way the panel is configured to convert to a main breaker requires you to use slots 1 and 3 on the upper left side of the panel. Also, it would be VERY difficult to put in some type of disconnect ahead of the panel.
The only solution that readily presents itself is to limit my circuits in the current steel building panel and run a sub panel off of this panel to another part of the building. Not something I am opposed to because this would have its own advantage for my set-up. For the electricians out there...would I still be within code compliance if my existing panel only had 6 breakers (one of them being a 50 or 60 amp breaker feeding the new subp panel)?
Sorry the set-up took so long to get to the finish!
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