ericm
Well-known member
[it's been suggested that I should make my own thread for this rather than piggyback on an existing one]
I'm trying to do a load calc for my situation to see if my service is enough. I currently have a 2400 sq ft house, and a 2400 sq ft barn without power. I'm planning on powering the barn and building a 1600 sq ft shop.
I'm using the Mike Holt spreadsheet. I think I figured out the house inputs. Lighting goes by sq ft so that's easy. The barn's only getting lighting and one 20a circuit for outlets, so that's easy to add. It's the shop equipment where I'm lost. I can account for compressor and lift motors in the pool section under intermittent motors and general 120v outlets as small appliance circuits but where do I account for a welder?
Also, a dumb question: I have a main panel next to the meter with a 25a for the well pump and a 125a for the house. I plan to add breakers for the barn and shop. Can those breakers add up to more than the service (which I think is 200a)? If so, what protects the service from being overloaded?
Also if anyone knows how PG&E wants this calculated I'd love to hear it. I found the green book but can't find the right part for load calculations.
I'm trying to do a load calc for my situation to see if my service is enough. I currently have a 2400 sq ft house, and a 2400 sq ft barn without power. I'm planning on powering the barn and building a 1600 sq ft shop.
I'm using the Mike Holt spreadsheet. I think I figured out the house inputs. Lighting goes by sq ft so that's easy. The barn's only getting lighting and one 20a circuit for outlets, so that's easy to add. It's the shop equipment where I'm lost. I can account for compressor and lift motors in the pool section under intermittent motors and general 120v outlets as small appliance circuits but where do I account for a welder?
Also, a dumb question: I have a main panel next to the meter with a 25a for the well pump and a 125a for the house. I plan to add breakers for the barn and shop. Can those breakers add up to more than the service (which I think is 200a)? If so, what protects the service from being overloaded?
Also if anyone knows how PG&E wants this calculated I'd love to hear it. I found the green book but can't find the right part for load calculations.