Zeke
Well-known member
Maybe he's calling it a duplex. 
If the apartment is properly seperated from the house it shouldn't be a problem. That 2nd service generally requires a second (different) address. Like 12345A and 12345B.you have 2 services for 1 building? oooofff
A 26a kiln will require a 40 amp ckt. A kiln is considered a continuous load.House and attached apartment. House built that way.
Yes i want to bdl ck on what was done in 2012 when the fuse boxes were upgraded to breaker boxes.
Yes im thinking of adding a 26a kiln. I might put it on the dryer 30a breaker witha switch so only one can be operated at a time, but not sure i need too.
Lots of red flags, fuse boxes upgraded got me. If I had to speculate, I'd guess he rents out the attached apartment, that's why there is a 2nd meter. I'm wondering how old this place is if it had fuse boxes, those went out of fashion in what, the 60s...50s? I have the house Dad built in 71 and it has a square D breaker box like one we'd buy today. Good news is back then they probably used big pure copper wire. I don't know, I'm only 51. He may have a legitimate concern if this place is really old.you have 2 services for 1 building? oooofff
yep. When I bought this house, we had the service upgraded from 100A to 200a. Utility declined to replace the #6 aluminum triplex, so I have goofy looking 6 to 4/0 splices at the weather head. linesman who put the seal on the meter said "if they burn up, we'll replace them. " Their engineers do the calculations based on the square footage of hte house, modified by knowing if you have unusual loads. my house didn't get any bigger, so there's no change in calculated demand. (and probably no real change, either. My peak is probably higher, but average is lower.)On the utility side they don't really care what size your main breaker is. They size stuff to the actual load. They know a residential 200A service will use less than 60A 99% of the time.