Slowbuilder
Well-known member
I am in the midst of a shop build (an addition to my existing shop - see my other thread), and since life wasn't complicated enough, my wife and I decided to purchase a Spa for Christmas.
Here's my difficulty - the existing shop has a 60a sub-panel in it which will likely eventually need to be upgraded to something like 100a, the spa will require 50a of 240v, and my main panel is full. Well, not COMPLETELY full, there is one 1/2 slot open, and one full-size breaker that could be doubled, giving 1 full-size slot open. Not enough to add a 50a 240v circuit for the spa.
There is a 125a capacity sub-panel mounted outside near the back of the house, that appears to be fed (daisy chained?) from the dryer circuit that terminates on the inside of the wall where it is mounted (someone has written on the inside of the panel "To shut off use Dryer breaker"). Caveat - I didn't do any of this wiring, and have no idea whether it was permitted and/or inspected, or done by a licensed electrician.
First question: If I upgrade the wire size appropriately, and put in a 125a breaker to feed the sub-panel on the house, can I then feed a new 100a service to a sub-panel in the shop from this sub-panel?
Second question: Can I then feed the dryer circuit (30a) from the 125a sub-panel on the house into the house? There would then be more than one panel feeding circuits in the house (though both panels would be controlled by the one disconnect in the main panel).
The objective here is to replace the existing 30a dryer circuit breaker with a 125a breaker to feed this 125a sub-panel, and then feed the dryer (30a), the spa (50a) and the shop (100a) from this sub-panel.
If I can't feed a sub-panel from a sub-panel, then I will size the feed for the sub-panel on the house for 100a or so, and feed the dryer and spa from this sub-panel, and then run a new feed for the 100a shop sub-panel from the main panel. The advantage of the first approach is that the feed for the shop will need to run almost directly past the 125a sub-panel; I could save the cost of that second run from the main to the sub for the shop feed.
Here's my difficulty - the existing shop has a 60a sub-panel in it which will likely eventually need to be upgraded to something like 100a, the spa will require 50a of 240v, and my main panel is full. Well, not COMPLETELY full, there is one 1/2 slot open, and one full-size breaker that could be doubled, giving 1 full-size slot open. Not enough to add a 50a 240v circuit for the spa.
There is a 125a capacity sub-panel mounted outside near the back of the house, that appears to be fed (daisy chained?) from the dryer circuit that terminates on the inside of the wall where it is mounted (someone has written on the inside of the panel "To shut off use Dryer breaker"). Caveat - I didn't do any of this wiring, and have no idea whether it was permitted and/or inspected, or done by a licensed electrician.
First question: If I upgrade the wire size appropriately, and put in a 125a breaker to feed the sub-panel on the house, can I then feed a new 100a service to a sub-panel in the shop from this sub-panel?
Second question: Can I then feed the dryer circuit (30a) from the 125a sub-panel on the house into the house? There would then be more than one panel feeding circuits in the house (though both panels would be controlled by the one disconnect in the main panel).
The objective here is to replace the existing 30a dryer circuit breaker with a 125a breaker to feed this 125a sub-panel, and then feed the dryer (30a), the spa (50a) and the shop (100a) from this sub-panel.
If I can't feed a sub-panel from a sub-panel, then I will size the feed for the sub-panel on the house for 100a or so, and feed the dryer and spa from this sub-panel, and then run a new feed for the 100a shop sub-panel from the main panel. The advantage of the first approach is that the feed for the shop will need to run almost directly past the 125a sub-panel; I could save the cost of that second run from the main to the sub for the shop feed.
ready to start when needed… on your electrical question, I guess there is not an option to upgrade (redo) the existing panal to a larger panel box with more breaker slots?
just askin' a silly question... LOL!!!