mach158
Well-known member
So long story short I recently discovered the wire I had an electrician install 2 years ago is to small for the service he was suppose to be installing it for.
I asked for the electrician to install a 100 amp sub panel in my barn which is around 230' from the panel in the house. I wanted 240 volts to be supplied out there as well. He used #4 Al wire. At the time I did not know any better and assumed he should know what we was doing.
The reason I just discovered this is because I thought he was going to call and have the inspector come for the final inspection then discovered he never did and by then a storm had ruined the barn enough that it was getting torn down and I then built my shop which I have a thread on in garage gallery.
So I decided to do the electrical myself after finding out I could, as I thought initially any sub panel had to be installed by an electrician. So I called the electrical inspector and he advised me that #4 Al is not enough for 100 amp service.
I decided to look into a little more and discovered he should have installed 1/0 Al at a minimum.
I realized I could have done a few things different but I never dealt with service lines before, only interior wiring.
Now my problem is, how do I deal with this situation? Will I be fighting with the electrician to remedy this since it has been 2 years and his original permit was closed because the building was demolished and a new one built so time ran out on that permit? My other problem is I just had my concrete poured and conduit in place which is 1.25" which is great for the #4 Al but no where big enough for the 1/0 Al, so now I need to core out the concrete because that is the only way the wire is coming in. My gut told me to go to 2" conduit for future purposes but I already had the 1.25' so I held off. I did run an empty 1.25' conduit as a backup for future use I could use.
I do still have his original quote for service that noted a 100 amp service.
Sorry for the long rant, just had to get it out.
I asked for the electrician to install a 100 amp sub panel in my barn which is around 230' from the panel in the house. I wanted 240 volts to be supplied out there as well. He used #4 Al wire. At the time I did not know any better and assumed he should know what we was doing.
The reason I just discovered this is because I thought he was going to call and have the inspector come for the final inspection then discovered he never did and by then a storm had ruined the barn enough that it was getting torn down and I then built my shop which I have a thread on in garage gallery.
So I decided to do the electrical myself after finding out I could, as I thought initially any sub panel had to be installed by an electrician. So I called the electrical inspector and he advised me that #4 Al is not enough for 100 amp service.
I decided to look into a little more and discovered he should have installed 1/0 Al at a minimum.
I realized I could have done a few things different but I never dealt with service lines before, only interior wiring.
Now my problem is, how do I deal with this situation? Will I be fighting with the electrician to remedy this since it has been 2 years and his original permit was closed because the building was demolished and a new one built so time ran out on that permit? My other problem is I just had my concrete poured and conduit in place which is 1.25" which is great for the #4 Al but no where big enough for the 1/0 Al, so now I need to core out the concrete because that is the only way the wire is coming in. My gut told me to go to 2" conduit for future purposes but I already had the 1.25' so I held off. I did run an empty 1.25' conduit as a backup for future use I could use.
I do still have his original quote for service that noted a 100 amp service.
Sorry for the long rant, just had to get it out.
. . ironic this is same SOL acronym !!