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Are these two breakers on the same phase/leg?

marklbucla

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Dec 6, 2010
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18
Please see the attachment. Are the two QOT tandem circuit breakers in the red boxes on the same phase/leg of the panel? I believe this to be a Square D panel and is a subpanel, not a main panel.
 

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snyder

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Dec 18, 2008
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Baltimore md.
I don't mean to be *******, but I only see one incoming hot leg in that pic. Where is the second phase at?
 

mark flucke

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Feb 14, 2016
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don't see much for grounding-hopefully the conduit isn't being used for ground-I hate that!:mad:
 

sberry

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You can hate it all you want but its as good or better than a wire in these type of circuits. The code people seem to think its adequate. If there was a better way they would mandate it.
 

wyliesdiesels

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Modesto, CA
where is this panel located?

Is there another panel in the same building as this panel?

If not, then there are too many breaker handles without a main. I count 9.
 
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dogdog

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Don't know if your panel is correct or not, you can always set your multimeter to AC Voltage above 240 range... and poke both hot legs ... it will either read 0 or 240-ish....

looks like, I am guessing the two blue are incoming hot legs protect by 60AMP, tape over white is neutral, and that untaped black is the ground... but I am guessing, make use of that multi-meter ?
 

wyliesdiesels

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Modesto, CA
Don't know if your panel is correct or not, you can always set your multimeter to AC Voltage above 240 range... and poke both hot legs ... it will either read 0 or 240-ish....

looks like, I am guessing the two blue are incoming hot legs protect by 60AMP, tape over white is neutral, and that untaped black is the ground... but I am guessing, make use of that multi-meter ?

nope.

Theres 2 black hot legs. The one on the left and the one on the right to the right of the neutral. you can see the screw next to the breaker.
 

dogdog

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nope.

Theres 2 black hot legs. The one on the left and the one on the right to the right of the neutral. you can see the screw next to the breaker.

yea needed new glasses for my eyes.... ;p

still the same for the OP though... otherwise, shut down everything and see how the breakers are connected or used multimeter... not that hard..... odd breakers...
 
OP
M

marklbucla

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Dec 6, 2010
Messages
18
where is this panel located?

Is there another panel in the same building as this panel?

If not, then there are too many breaker handles without a main. I count 9.

This is the garage sub panel. There is a panel outside that controls this along with another sub panel inside the house.

Does this still need a main?
 

sberry

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If it is the only panel in the garage then its the service disconnect to that structure and needs a main if there are more than 6 spaces or switches in the panel. The use of tandem breakers makes it more in this case.
If this is the main in that structure to make it legal would need to remove the tandems and replace with normal breakers and feed another panel with some more spaces you need.
 
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