With the provisos I noted in my earlier replies to you (particularly
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showpost.php?p=3442875&postcount=21 and
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showpost.php?p=3442875&postcount=26), probably. But those "provisos" ARE important; so don't ignore them.
Based on your phrasing, it is still not clear whether you intend to connect the feeder to your main distribution panel, or directly to the meter pan. The distinction can be (and probably is) important, and you SHOULD at least clarify this (pics might help) before proceeding.
I would like to install a dbl pole breaker to run my main feeder off to the shop ..as the only use the panel has is for my well and storage and the storage will be gone as soon as I hook up my shop...I posted a pic on the first page of my meter can with the breakers at the bottom of it...my house comes right of the meter and not through the breaker panel at the bottom....
Either way, and as noted earlier, AWG 2 AL will be marginal; but you MAY find it acceptable (I probably wouldn't). By comparison, AWG 2 copper will be more than adequate; but it won't be cheap
went back and looked at lowes and they also have 4aw wire but how could I hook it to a breaker..this is direct burial .....is there a difference in #2 and 2awg wire ?????
Yes.
Any sub-panel in a detached structure with more than six branch-circuit breakers MUST also have a local disconnect. This is the impetus for the "back-fed main breaker" approach which is so often recommended here. In your particular case, given the panel you've chosen, there is a special breaker made for just this purpose:
not a problem I can carry the box back and get 1 with the main breaker in it..
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Square-D...-less-Rated-Load-Centers-QOM100VHCP/100132766
It has lugs designed to accept up to AWG 2/0 wire from the incoming feeder. And note, even if (per your "breaker count" comments below) you don't think you'll have more than six breaker handles in the box right away, you surely WILL cross that threshold sooner or later (I'm betting "sooner"). So best to prepare for that now.
From a "breaker count" point of view, this is probably OK. But I would suggest that you run both circuits to ALL of your 120V outlet locations, then use double-gang boxes at each of those locations, with one duplex in each box fed from each circuit. The first outlet in each of these "chains" must be a GFCI type. If you have (or will acquire in the foreseeable future) any semi-serious "stationary" power tools (such as a bench grinder, drill press, etc.), you may want to provide additional dedicated (or at least semi-dedicated) circuits for these.
not sure what you mean here...
Don't you have two welders? Granted, you're not likely to run them both at the same time; but depending on (among other things) your shop layout, you may want to provide separate dedicated feeds to each one.
yes I have 2 welder the plug is at the door so I can weld on my dump truck if I have to .. they both have about 20' of cable for this and the same plug ends ....
What about heat?
you are right I forgot about that circuit 220
You seem to have overlooked your main lighting in this list. That will require at least one more 120V branch circuit; and a good argument can be made to split it up into two separate circuits.
on my main lighting I have 2 circuits 1 for the left side and 1 for the right side each will have its on breaker
The "night light" (dare I presume you mean some sort of decorative exterior lighting?) can very probably be tacked onto one of your main lighting circuits. But I would probably NOT run it off your outlet circuit(s); and if you do, it will require at least AWG 12 wiring.
not a big problem I can run its own circuit I had thought about it anyway so I can have a switch to control it and not let it just come on and off by design..dust til dawn light...