goldie lox
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 12, 2015
- Messages
- 142
upgrading to a 400a single phase residental service, its an over head drop with 15 of wire needed from the weather head. what size wire will be needed.
Most of what I see is two sets of 4/0 aluminum
Two 200amp panels
The house that I used to own, a new build in 1987, had 400 amp service that was split from the meter into two 200 amp panels. Used two sets of 4/0 wiring. Yes, this was inspector approved. The trick is that the wiring needs to be EXACTLY matched in length, to avoid resistance differences from one side to the other.
And as for loads, this was a 4,000 sq ft house with two 12 ton heat pumps, well pump, electric water heater, electric stove, etc, etc.
'Cept 2-4/0 AL do not equal 400A.
why do i need to do a load calc. i need to have to two 200 amp panels, one in a house and one in a 60x120 out building. so from what some of you say i should just keep the 200a in the house and run a sub panel into the outbuilding ok lets see. normal house elec heat heat pump ac with garage and garage stuff being used.
now outbuilding heated floors, hot water heater, welder, two air compressors, small lift ect....
ya let me just run the 200a panel with a 60a sub
why do i need to do a load calc. i need to have to two 200 amp panels, one in a house and one in a 60x120 out building. so from what some of you say i should just keep the 200a in the house and run a sub panel into the outbuilding ok lets see. normal house elec heat heat pump ac with garage and garage stuff being used.
now outbuilding heated floors, hot water heater, welder, two air compressors, small lift ect....
ya let me just run the 200a panel with a 60a sub
why do i need to do a load calc. i need to have to two 200 amp panels, one in a house and one in a 60x120 out building. so from what some of you say i should just keep the 200a in the house and run a sub panel into the outbuilding ok lets see. normal house elec heat heat pump ac with garage and garage stuff being used.
now outbuilding heated floors, hot water heater, welder, two air compressors, small lift ect....
ya let me just run the 200a panel with a 60a sub
It's a residential service, we get to use the 83% rule. So parallel 4/0 AL is fine.
PoCo probably won't change a thing, unless you really to have a ton of load. I think most 400a services around here are fed by a 25KVA transformer (good for about 100a continuous) and 2/0 aluminum pack.
why do i need to do a load calc. i need to have to two 200 amp panels, one in a house and one in a 60x120 out building. so from what some of you say i should just keep the 200a in the house and run a sub panel into the outbuilding ok lets see. normal house elec heat heat pump ac with garage and garage stuff being used.
now outbuilding heated floors, hot water heater, welder, two air compressors, small lift ect....
ya let me just run the 200a panel with a 60a sub
My 400 is fed by a 15kva.
15KVA is about 63a @ 240v.
How do you know its only 15KVA?
Whats the highest current youve pulled continuously?
Is this trany dedicated to your service?
If you pull too much youll blow the cut-outs on the pole.
Transformers are almost always labeled unless it really old and the numbers faded. For example a 15KVA will have a "15". Same as street lighting, they have a numbered, colored tag to indicate type and wattage. A yellow 40 means 400w hps.
They are ALWAYS undersized compared to what we as electricians are used to. But the utility's know most residential and farm services are not heavily loaded and the transformer can handle short peaks. Rule of thumb is an oil filled transformer will hold a 200% overload for 3 hours with no damage.
Have do the load calcs in order to use the rule, which is not sinking in with the OP.
Have do the load calcs in order to use the rule, which is not sinking in with the OP.
Whats evidently not sinking in is that the OP asked what size wire for the installation, not whether he needed the service or not.....
Lots of good discussion here as to what is needed.
But maybe the issue is about wants, not needs.
If the OP wants a 400 amp service just for the bragging rights, I would not judge him for that as it is his money.
I myself have been looking for an excuse to run multi-mode fiber to my detached garage, which is about 10 feet from my house. Maybe somebody here can help me with that.
Whats evidently not sinking in is that the OP asked what size wire for the installation, not whether he needed the service or not.....
The only reason, in your situation for fiber, would be to isolate the garage for lightning suppression...
What was your reasoning for wanting it?