TNToy
Well-known member
Most of you probably saw my previous post about installing a sub-panel in the garage to power everything out there.
Well, I started checking everything out this morning to go price everything at Home Depot, Lowes, and the local hardware place... and this is really weird.
Okay. Here's a picture of the main breaker panel in our home. Background: This house was built in '78 and has no aluminum wire, so at least I didn't have to contend with that. But EVERYTHING in this place is electric. Not only is it all electric, but there are no gas lines. Usually in a home with electric major appliances, you'll find a capped-off gas line here and there. I don't have a single gas line in my house.
So electric loading is significant. Electric dryer, heat, water heater, and whatnot have all been running at the same time.
First step was to go look outside. No breakers. Popped the cover off of the meter just in case they weirdly stuck the main breaker in there. Just large cables coming up out of the ground, to the meter, and then fed through 1.5" conduit through the wall, and straight into the back of the main panel.
Now here's a picture of the main panel with the cover on, so you can see which breaker is which:
Note that, above, the breaker labeled "main" is 60 AMPS!... and then, two above it, is the heat pump's breaker. 100 AMPS.
No big deal, they just mixed up the labels, right? Okay. Now things get weird... Here's the cover off the panel:
The orange-handled breaker is the 'main' one. It's output feeds some portion of the rest of the box, I guess? The output from that breaker loops around and connects to the feeders running down the center of the box. Here's a close-up:
And while I'm at it, here's a closer shot of all the breakers showing what everything is rated:
So I guess I have two questions:
(1) Is this some type of weird panel, where all the major appliances are up at the top, and the 'main' only operates the bottom half of the panel, with lights and receptacles fed by it?
If that's so, then...
(2)How do I figure out what my service is rated?
(3)How do I cut power to the whole panel to safely wire in the 100A subpanel? I can't get around the fact that the feeders from the street are always hot, but can it seriously be set up so that there's no way to kill power to the main rails down the center of the box?
(4)Where do I install a 100A double-pole breaker? My plan all along has been to swap a couple of 20A receptacle breakers out for slim-line ones, and make the space I need for a double-pole breaker. If those are actually fed off of the 60A "main" breaker... that's not going to work.
What the heck is going on here?
I know there's no way I've got 100A service. The heat pump, oven, and dryer all running at once would pretty much consume that whole quota...
Well, I started checking everything out this morning to go price everything at Home Depot, Lowes, and the local hardware place... and this is really weird.
Okay. Here's a picture of the main breaker panel in our home. Background: This house was built in '78 and has no aluminum wire, so at least I didn't have to contend with that. But EVERYTHING in this place is electric. Not only is it all electric, but there are no gas lines. Usually in a home with electric major appliances, you'll find a capped-off gas line here and there. I don't have a single gas line in my house.
So electric loading is significant. Electric dryer, heat, water heater, and whatnot have all been running at the same time.
First step was to go look outside. No breakers. Popped the cover off of the meter just in case they weirdly stuck the main breaker in there. Just large cables coming up out of the ground, to the meter, and then fed through 1.5" conduit through the wall, and straight into the back of the main panel.
Now here's a picture of the main panel with the cover on, so you can see which breaker is which:
Note that, above, the breaker labeled "main" is 60 AMPS!... and then, two above it, is the heat pump's breaker. 100 AMPS.
No big deal, they just mixed up the labels, right? Okay. Now things get weird... Here's the cover off the panel:
The orange-handled breaker is the 'main' one. It's output feeds some portion of the rest of the box, I guess? The output from that breaker loops around and connects to the feeders running down the center of the box. Here's a close-up:
And while I'm at it, here's a closer shot of all the breakers showing what everything is rated:
So I guess I have two questions:
(1) Is this some type of weird panel, where all the major appliances are up at the top, and the 'main' only operates the bottom half of the panel, with lights and receptacles fed by it?
If that's so, then...
(2)How do I figure out what my service is rated?
(3)How do I cut power to the whole panel to safely wire in the 100A subpanel? I can't get around the fact that the feeders from the street are always hot, but can it seriously be set up so that there's no way to kill power to the main rails down the center of the box?
(4)Where do I install a 100A double-pole breaker? My plan all along has been to swap a couple of 20A receptacle breakers out for slim-line ones, and make the space I need for a double-pole breaker. If those are actually fed off of the 60A "main" breaker... that's not going to work.
What the heck is going on here?
I know there's no way I've got 100A service. The heat pump, oven, and dryer all running at once would pretty much consume that whole quota...
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