pblanton
Well-known member
Hello all.
I have a house in Colorado that was originally built in 1971, then added onto in the mid eighties. The guy who built/owned it fancied himself a competent do it yourselfer (he wasn't).
We are just starting a multi-year remodel which will touch every square foot of the house, including the eventual replacement of every electrical circuit, switch and fixture. We currently have issues, where my wife vacuuming the bedroom will trip the 15Amp bedroom breaker which will kill the lights too, as well as the outlets and lights in my daughter's bedroom and bathroom on the floor below. Clearly WAAAAYY too many items on that single circuit.
I bought a new Square D QO panel, a mess of new breakers and couple-thousand feet of Romex (Mix of 14/2 and 12/2). I do have electrical experience, having wired new houses from the ground up, and re-wired a number of old houses. When I was a teenager my dad was a home-builder and I worked as an electrician for a number of years back then. Also I have hired a young man who is currently employed as an electrician apprentice. He tests for his "Residential Wireman" license in March. I have no doubt that we can do this, so I don't need any recommendations for a local contractor. I have done the straight out panel replacement before but what I want to do here is a little different, hence my question.
The location of the old panel is not ideal. The part of the house it is in will ultimately be torn down and replaced, but not for a year or so. Here's the gist...
I want to mount the new panel in the basement (the current panel is in a buttress wall inside the walk in pantry in the kitchen.) Then feed the new panel as if it's a sub-panel, off of an existing 100 Amp breaker in the old panel. The location I have chosen in the basement is across the room from the boiler, water heater tank, and water treatment systems. Above the new panel location is a vertical shaft that allows me to easily run wiring all the way up into the second floor attic, meaning I can pretty effortlessly make wire runs anywhere in the house from here.
I also plan on running the new service entry up the basement wall and outside over the concrete, back down into the ground and direct buried to the meter pole. Currently the meter pole goes up and the service entrance drops through the air to a weather head above the kitchen.
As I remodel different rooms, I will pull the old circuits out of the wall, as closely as I can get them to the old panel, then remove their breakers from the old panel and tie off their dead wires. Feeding the new circuits from the new panel as I go.
Eventually I will get to a tipping point where I have more circuits on the new panel, than the old one, at which point I will call the power company and have them switch the mains from the old panel weatherhead drop, to the new panel's underground feed.
Then I'll use the wire running the new panel as a sub off of the old one, and instead run it to feed the old panel as a sub from the new one. At this point all 220V circuits will have been replaced and the old panel will only have a handful of outlets and lighting circuits on it.
Later, after the old panel's circuits have all been replaced/switched over to the new panel, then I'll cut the sub-panel feed to it and remove the rest of its left over elements.
I imagine this will take something like a year, to get enough of the old circuits replaced to justify pulling the old panel.
Has anyone here done anything like this before and of so, did you run into any issues I should know about?
Thanks in advance!
I have a house in Colorado that was originally built in 1971, then added onto in the mid eighties. The guy who built/owned it fancied himself a competent do it yourselfer (he wasn't).
We are just starting a multi-year remodel which will touch every square foot of the house, including the eventual replacement of every electrical circuit, switch and fixture. We currently have issues, where my wife vacuuming the bedroom will trip the 15Amp bedroom breaker which will kill the lights too, as well as the outlets and lights in my daughter's bedroom and bathroom on the floor below. Clearly WAAAAYY too many items on that single circuit.
I bought a new Square D QO panel, a mess of new breakers and couple-thousand feet of Romex (Mix of 14/2 and 12/2). I do have electrical experience, having wired new houses from the ground up, and re-wired a number of old houses. When I was a teenager my dad was a home-builder and I worked as an electrician for a number of years back then. Also I have hired a young man who is currently employed as an electrician apprentice. He tests for his "Residential Wireman" license in March. I have no doubt that we can do this, so I don't need any recommendations for a local contractor. I have done the straight out panel replacement before but what I want to do here is a little different, hence my question.
The location of the old panel is not ideal. The part of the house it is in will ultimately be torn down and replaced, but not for a year or so. Here's the gist...
I want to mount the new panel in the basement (the current panel is in a buttress wall inside the walk in pantry in the kitchen.) Then feed the new panel as if it's a sub-panel, off of an existing 100 Amp breaker in the old panel. The location I have chosen in the basement is across the room from the boiler, water heater tank, and water treatment systems. Above the new panel location is a vertical shaft that allows me to easily run wiring all the way up into the second floor attic, meaning I can pretty effortlessly make wire runs anywhere in the house from here.
I also plan on running the new service entry up the basement wall and outside over the concrete, back down into the ground and direct buried to the meter pole. Currently the meter pole goes up and the service entrance drops through the air to a weather head above the kitchen.
As I remodel different rooms, I will pull the old circuits out of the wall, as closely as I can get them to the old panel, then remove their breakers from the old panel and tie off their dead wires. Feeding the new circuits from the new panel as I go.
Eventually I will get to a tipping point where I have more circuits on the new panel, than the old one, at which point I will call the power company and have them switch the mains from the old panel weatherhead drop, to the new panel's underground feed.
Then I'll use the wire running the new panel as a sub off of the old one, and instead run it to feed the old panel as a sub from the new one. At this point all 220V circuits will have been replaced and the old panel will only have a handful of outlets and lighting circuits on it.
Later, after the old panel's circuits have all been replaced/switched over to the new panel, then I'll cut the sub-panel feed to it and remove the rest of its left over elements.
I imagine this will take something like a year, to get enough of the old circuits replaced to justify pulling the old panel.
Has anyone here done anything like this before and of so, did you run into any issues I should know about?
Thanks in advance!