wyliesdiesels
Well-known member
wow that is something else on the well pump.... definitely needs to be fixed
If you want 100a, you could go with #1 ALSpoke with the electrician today. He's on board although it will be a few weeks (he is moving to a different house). No problem with my proceeding with the subpanel.
2-2-2-4 Aluminum SER gives me 90A IIRC. To get a true 100A, sounds like Copper 3-3-3-5 SER is the way to go? It might be available locally.

They don't even engage the panel properly. They (and a few of the other breakers) have an engagement tab that is spaced farther from the stab than the panel supports. They were pushed onto the stab but the tab does not engage anything. They also don't engage into the new subpanel that I bought. The existing breakers had four (that I could find) different configurations for clipping into the panel: wide-spaced metal clip (works both), narrow-spaced metal clip (only works on old one), plastic groove (works on both) and extended plastic groove (works on neither). The tab for the 50A GFCI spa breaker is broken. I should have taken pics but some of y'all probably know exactly what I found.The twin breakers in the CH panel have no business there, it was not UL listed to use them & was decades later before Eaton introduced them to the market.
If they flop around where click on on the rail, they were not intended to be installed there, I used to have a photo of a C-H interior that was made for twins but it went away with the Photobucket debacle.They don't even engage the panel properly. They (and a few of the other breakers) have an engagement tab that is spaced farther from the stab than the panel supports. They were pushed onto the stab but the tab does not engage anything. They also don't engage into the new subpanel that I bought. The existing breakers had four (that I could find) different configurations for clipping into the panel: wide-spaced metal clip (works both), narrow-spaced metal clip (only works on old one), plastic groove (works on both) and extended plastic groove (works on neither). The tab for the 50A GFCI spa breaker is broken. I should have taken pics but some of y'all probably know exactly what I found.
I suspect the main panel is going to get replaced anyway.





This. There is a pool and a hot tub with no GFCI? I would rip those feeds out of the panel immediately. At least you can run away from an electrical fire, electrocution is kinda quick.Making progress.
I can't deal with fixing old ****... I'd rip everything out and start over, full nuclear. You sound more patient than me![]()
Yes, that's why hot tub disconnects come with a GFCI breaker installed. Just find a CH 3R panel and you can use the breaker you already have.Back on that hot tub GFCI…. The breaker that was in place for that doesn’t fit properly; if you look at the bottom of the CH250GF breaker, there’s a rounded area between the rail clip and the stabs that hits the bus bar in this panel.
From this ill-fitting breaker there is THWN going straight through the wall into an exterior box with 50A breaker that serves as the local disconnect for the hot tub. Would it be OK to put a regular breaker inside and have the GFCI on the outside breaker? I can see the advantage to having GFCI inside (that way the exterior box itself and people operating it are protected) and I suspect that is the answer, but I’d like to know the detailed answer.