jds62f
Member
Hi,
I have an existing detached garage, with wiring, but done poorly. I'm at the onset of planning, and i got great answers last time so I'm hoping someone will be gracious again. NEC 2014 is what I'm looking at for my area. I am looking at replacing all of the branches coming from this panel and will be having the work inspected.
Here's the subpanel I have. Power comes in through the bottom left, and leaves primarily out the top (with one exit on the lower right)
Panel Questions
I have 2 40a circuits from the main panel feeding this subpanel. Is it allowed to have 8 15amp circuits assuming I don't plan to use all circuits to their capacity at the same time? (8*15a=120a, which is greater than the incoming 80a, does that pass inpsection)
This panel doesn't have a ground and i am planning to redo all circuits coming from it. I'm interested in what sort of changes I might do that would make changing the panel a requirement for passing inspection:
Can I add a circuit to this panel? I couldn't find circuit breakers like this anywhere I looked, what type are they?
If I replace the existing branches, they will require a ground wire correct? If this panel doesn't have one, does this mean I need to replace it with a panel that has one? Can I add a ground to this panell?
If I did add a ground, does it come from the main panel? Can/should this subpanel be grounded separately from the main?
Branches
Is there anything against running 2 branches in the same EMT run provided I meet the wire count limitations specified for a given EMT size?
I have an unfinished ceiling. Can I run branches to recepticles with electrical plugs mounted to the joists, and then plug shop lights into them (rather than hardwiring)? Where in the NEC I should look at for the rules that surround putting an electrical plug for lighting overhead?
I have an existing detached garage, with wiring, but done poorly. I'm at the onset of planning, and i got great answers last time so I'm hoping someone will be gracious again. NEC 2014 is what I'm looking at for my area. I am looking at replacing all of the branches coming from this panel and will be having the work inspected.
Here's the subpanel I have. Power comes in through the bottom left, and leaves primarily out the top (with one exit on the lower right)
Panel Questions
I have 2 40a circuits from the main panel feeding this subpanel. Is it allowed to have 8 15amp circuits assuming I don't plan to use all circuits to their capacity at the same time? (8*15a=120a, which is greater than the incoming 80a, does that pass inpsection)
This panel doesn't have a ground and i am planning to redo all circuits coming from it. I'm interested in what sort of changes I might do that would make changing the panel a requirement for passing inspection:
Can I add a circuit to this panel? I couldn't find circuit breakers like this anywhere I looked, what type are they?
If I replace the existing branches, they will require a ground wire correct? If this panel doesn't have one, does this mean I need to replace it with a panel that has one? Can I add a ground to this panell?
If I did add a ground, does it come from the main panel? Can/should this subpanel be grounded separately from the main?
Branches
Is there anything against running 2 branches in the same EMT run provided I meet the wire count limitations specified for a given EMT size?
I have an unfinished ceiling. Can I run branches to recepticles with electrical plugs mounted to the joists, and then plug shop lights into them (rather than hardwiring)? Where in the NEC I should look at for the rules that surround putting an electrical plug for lighting overhead?