Hello all, I hope this question isn't too obvious, but I've read enough now to wonder if I'm under thinking the process.
I just moved into a new place and the detached 22x22 garage (with a loft) has a single 10/3 wire entering the building, through a conduit.
I traced the wire to the house's 100 amp panel. This is a 220v circuit on a 30 amp breaker.
Back in the garage, the wire exits the conduit, directly into a 4" junction box in the wall. This looks like the original wiring (1998 date code on the wire).
Each leg of the 220v is servicing a 110v circuit. There are three electrical outlets on one circuit and 7 lights (4 interior, 3 exterior) and one over head door operator on the other.
I'd like to take that 10/3 220v and power up a small subpanel in the garage.
I need a 220v (15 amp) outlet for my compressor and I'd like to add a half dozen more lights to the shop ceiling.
I'm planning on using a 15 amp breaker for the 220v circuit and then run the other two circuits on 15 amp circuits. I don't think I'd be drawing over 10amps on either of those 110v circuits, even with my Hobart 140.
My big question is, and it comes from reading another recent thread; is there something I'm missing? It seems pretty straight forward but I'm not an electrician, though I've successfully (not burned down the last garage in 10 years) done this before.
Thanks for any insight, it's very much appreciated.
Chad.
I just moved into a new place and the detached 22x22 garage (with a loft) has a single 10/3 wire entering the building, through a conduit.
I traced the wire to the house's 100 amp panel. This is a 220v circuit on a 30 amp breaker.
Back in the garage, the wire exits the conduit, directly into a 4" junction box in the wall. This looks like the original wiring (1998 date code on the wire).
Each leg of the 220v is servicing a 110v circuit. There are three electrical outlets on one circuit and 7 lights (4 interior, 3 exterior) and one over head door operator on the other.
I'd like to take that 10/3 220v and power up a small subpanel in the garage.
I need a 220v (15 amp) outlet for my compressor and I'd like to add a half dozen more lights to the shop ceiling.
I'm planning on using a 15 amp breaker for the 220v circuit and then run the other two circuits on 15 amp circuits. I don't think I'd be drawing over 10amps on either of those 110v circuits, even with my Hobart 140.
My big question is, and it comes from reading another recent thread; is there something I'm missing? It seems pretty straight forward but I'm not an electrician, though I've successfully (not burned down the last garage in 10 years) done this before.
Thanks for any insight, it's very much appreciated.
Chad.
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