kf4zht
Well-known member
Since my plans for an outside shop met the reality of budget vs time in this house I am building out a small shop in my basement for the machine shop.
Plan is to run a sub panel to the room, surface mounted with conduit running around the room to the various equipment. Done this before and it make it easy for changes, plus I can easily pull everything out in 3-4 years when we move and use at the new place.
Loads going on the subpanel:
Lathe - 220v 20a
Mill - 110v 20a dedicated
Compressor - 110v 30a dedicated (outside but on this panel)
Welder - Probably going with 220v 50a. It will draw 108 amps at full, but I never even hit 50% capacity, I would melt my tig torch first
2-3 110v 20a general breakers
Questions:
House has an Eaton BR panel. Probably going to stay the same for limiting breaker models. HD doesn't carry Eaton in store, but I know some breakers are compatible, will BR breakers fit in any of the panels they sell in house (GE, QD, etc)?
Supply Wiring - I want at least 70 amp to the panel, up to around 100amp. Wiring will need to be pulled through exposed studs and needs to route out the bottom, through the stud and back up due to panel space. What is the best choice wire for this amperage range for ease of pulling and is fairly available?
3 or 4 wire Supply? I can't keep track of the rules on bonded neutral vs seperate on subpanels and attached vs detached, etc.
Plan is to run a sub panel to the room, surface mounted with conduit running around the room to the various equipment. Done this before and it make it easy for changes, plus I can easily pull everything out in 3-4 years when we move and use at the new place.
Loads going on the subpanel:
Lathe - 220v 20a
Mill - 110v 20a dedicated
Compressor - 110v 30a dedicated (outside but on this panel)
Welder - Probably going with 220v 50a. It will draw 108 amps at full, but I never even hit 50% capacity, I would melt my tig torch first
2-3 110v 20a general breakers
Questions:
House has an Eaton BR panel. Probably going to stay the same for limiting breaker models. HD doesn't carry Eaton in store, but I know some breakers are compatible, will BR breakers fit in any of the panels they sell in house (GE, QD, etc)?
Supply Wiring - I want at least 70 amp to the panel, up to around 100amp. Wiring will need to be pulled through exposed studs and needs to route out the bottom, through the stud and back up due to panel space. What is the best choice wire for this amperage range for ease of pulling and is fairly available?
3 or 4 wire Supply? I can't keep track of the rules on bonded neutral vs seperate on subpanels and attached vs detached, etc.