Hello
Recently my father purchased a house and had it inspected and there were some things missed that are rather alarming regarding the main panels inside the home
Originally the home was a duplex, with 2 meters, 2 power boxes and was converted into a single family home. Now it has 1 set of feed wires going to 1 box, and that box has a 60A breaker feeding the other 100AMP panel on the other side of the wall. This is definitely not correct!
He was wanting to add a circuit breaker for some really high power sound system equipment, and add a bathroom in the basement, but when I added up his total circuit breaker amperage it's wayyyyyyyy over the limit
I'll call these Basement 1 and Basement 2
Basement 1 - 100A Panel - 395A worth of circuit breakers - Main Feed IN
Basement 2 - 100A Panel - 325A worth of circuit breakers - Powered by 60A Breaker on Basement 1 Panel
IIRC, you are only supposed to have AT MAX double the capacity of the main breaker, so we are looking for solutions here.
My idea was add 2 x 200 Amp Panels next to each other, but I have never done a double panel setup, only swapped out single panels.
I'm assuming now:
- The wiring from the pole to the meter needs to be rated for 400A
- The meter needs to be able to handle 400A
- Meter base needs a double lug?
- There needs to be 2 complete sets of wires from the meter base. Each set running from the meter to each panel respectively
Am I right here, or would you change anything?
Keep in mind this is a big house now, it has 6 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, huge kitchen, a detached 2 car garage, full finished basement, radon system, sump system, etc and needs a lot of breakers to handle modern power requirements but I think I can combine quite a few breakers and drop down many of the 20A breakers to 15s to save some "capacity"
Currently he isn't having too many issues except when he plugs a circular saw or something into the kitchen. It's amazing they aren't popping more breakers (if they even work still, panels are old)
Recently my father purchased a house and had it inspected and there were some things missed that are rather alarming regarding the main panels inside the home
Originally the home was a duplex, with 2 meters, 2 power boxes and was converted into a single family home. Now it has 1 set of feed wires going to 1 box, and that box has a 60A breaker feeding the other 100AMP panel on the other side of the wall. This is definitely not correct!
He was wanting to add a circuit breaker for some really high power sound system equipment, and add a bathroom in the basement, but when I added up his total circuit breaker amperage it's wayyyyyyyy over the limit
I'll call these Basement 1 and Basement 2
Basement 1 - 100A Panel - 395A worth of circuit breakers - Main Feed IN
Basement 2 - 100A Panel - 325A worth of circuit breakers - Powered by 60A Breaker on Basement 1 Panel
IIRC, you are only supposed to have AT MAX double the capacity of the main breaker, so we are looking for solutions here.
My idea was add 2 x 200 Amp Panels next to each other, but I have never done a double panel setup, only swapped out single panels.
I'm assuming now:
- The wiring from the pole to the meter needs to be rated for 400A
- The meter needs to be able to handle 400A
- Meter base needs a double lug?
- There needs to be 2 complete sets of wires from the meter base. Each set running from the meter to each panel respectively
Am I right here, or would you change anything?
Keep in mind this is a big house now, it has 6 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, huge kitchen, a detached 2 car garage, full finished basement, radon system, sump system, etc and needs a lot of breakers to handle modern power requirements but I think I can combine quite a few breakers and drop down many of the 20A breakers to 15s to save some "capacity"
Currently he isn't having too many issues except when he plugs a circular saw or something into the kitchen. It's amazing they aren't popping more breakers (if they even work still, panels are old)
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