T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
290.1 | It's been done ! | TONTO::EARLY | Bob_the_hiker :^) | Mon Jul 14 1986 21:25 | 22 |
| Might not be the same problem, but when I was investigating the
cost of power near <dunbarton>, I was quoted something like $8,000
mile from PSNH.
I have observed in my meanderings through NH and ME, a utility
pole line dropping down to a "construction type" MAIN box,
at the end of a path, and a very heavy cable running through the
trees. I never investigated what was happening (power to a remote
building ?); but perhaps something similiar might be done for your
brother-in-law ? (ie PSNH guarantees power to last utility
pole, and box; and said brother-in-law assumes the balance of the
way ??
I find the companies inability to put in poles rather strange, because
I've seen power running up hills to old lookout towers, ski slopes,
and other places. Perhaps an "old time" electrician is needed :^).
(These new fangled college educated lineman can't do beans without
a fancy truck and a power auger ;^) .)
bob
|
290.2 | Underground | USMRW1::RSCHAVONE | | Tue Jul 15 1986 13:38 | 8 |
|
Why not run it underground??? You can rent a trench digger to do
the digging, and run the power cable through PVC to the house.
That's the way my entire neighborhood is done. The one drwaback
to this is no street lights.
Ray
|
290.3 | can't go underground | HARPO::B_HENRY | Bill Henry | Tue Jul 15 1986 14:37 | 14 |
| First, he is going to have the meter put on the pole at the end of
the road. As for putting up poles in the woods, he (we) will do it
ourselves if we can find poles at a reasonable cost. I have put up
a few poles myself but my sourse of poles is no longer around.
He considered underground but the leading edge of the hill (the
direction the wire must come from) is all rock. The crest of the hill
(at least two feet down) is gravel. Also, until he comes up with
the $10,000 (lowest bid) for a bridge and road, there is no way short
of an airlift to get any machinery over the brook and up the hill.
The materials for his cabin were hand all carried up to the clearing.
This is why he is looking for sourses for poles and cable.
bill
|
290.4 | Go Hydroelectric! | BEING::WEISS | Forty-Two | Tue Jul 15 1986 15:22 | 18 |
| Have you thought of putting in your own generator system? If the brook is year-
round it might save you a lot of money in the long run. There was an article
in Country Journal about a year or two ago about putting them in. It seems
that it will cost about $10,000 to put in a system for a full sized house, but
that you can run the entire household -including electric heat- off of that
system forever. If you were easily accessable for the power company, the payoff
would be about 10 years, but if it is going to cost a lot to get the power lines
in the payoff time would be a lot shorter.
The system they described doesn't have any batteries or DC voltage or pain-in-
the-neck things like that. It is simply a generator with a Pelton wheel on it,
and a needle valve that regulates the flow of water to keep the generator
turning at a constant speed, regardless of load.
Imagine - never seeing an electric bill (or a gas bill, or oil bill, or wood
bill) again!
Paul
|
290.5 | Be Careful! | KARNAC::BUSENBARK | | Tue Jul 15 1986 16:04 | 8 |
| rep.4
That's a good idea if you own the water rights to the stream
or the source of the stream. Otherwise someone might shutoff the
water! Rindge in general from what I've seen has a high water table.
Rick
|
290.6 | hydro is for the future | HARPO::B_HENRY | Bill Henry | Tue Jul 15 1986 17:01 | 13 |
| Hydro electric power is a definite possibility for the future.
The foot bridge is beside what used to be a grist mill.
The problem with putting in a hydro plant is the same as putting
in the bridge and road, the environmental people are very insistant
on seeing the brook left alone without a study and the usual application
process. I did some calculations a few years ago and that site should be
able to provide both my brother-in-laws and my father-in-laws houses.
Also I understand it is law that the local power company HAS to buy
any surplus power you generate from you as long as it meets voltage
and frequency requirments.
The immediate need is to get power up there and there is a small
matter of available cash.
|
290.7 | Let someone else Do it for you! | KARNAC::BUSENBARK | | Wed Jul 16 1986 15:47 | 8 |
| It's also possible to sell the water rights if you own them
to a hydro power company for price of supplying your houses with
electricity or the road needed to get to the properties. That way
they have to provide all the neccesary data and info for there
license involving enviromental impact,rare species,and etc to const-
ruct and maintain the station.
|
290.8 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | | Thu Jul 17 1986 13:56 | 8 |
| How about a heavy-duty diesel generator installation, so you can
carry the electricity over to the cabin in 5-gallon cans? Depending
on need, maybe even a smallish gasoline generator. For the price
they're talking about for running power lines you could buy a heck
of a lot of gasoline or diesel fuel.
Steve
|
290.9 | Public Power Gird Source , if correctly done | TONTO::EARLY | Bob_the_hiker :^) | Tue Jul 29 1986 16:34 | 20 |
| re: Hydro Power
Form what I saw of an actual hydro installation in Lost Nation,
NH, the owner never touched the stream flow itself. He installed
a very long length of hose UPstream of where he wanted the generator,
installed the generator, and then discharged to the original stream.
Nothing dammed, nothing interfered with, and totally envirinmentally
acceptable (this person would not do it ANY OTHER WAY) !
And not only does he get enough for himelf; he also supplies power
to the PSNH Power Grid (they can't refuse it ). Perhaps your friend
could covenenant some land rights in exchange for surplus elecroPower??
Then there's alway Wind Generators, and Steam Powered Generators,
as well as the conventional stuff.
Bob
|
290.10 | Electrical circuit problems | OLORIN::SEGER | | Wed Aug 06 1986 13:20 | 22 |
| I have what I think MAY be an electrical problem. I was putting in a tile
backplash over my kitchen counters and had to remove the electrical outlets.
I didn't bother removing any of the wiring, but rather just unscrewed and pulled
the outlets out.
Tile installled and outlets put back into boxes. Time passes...
A couple of weeks later, the toaster oven dies. Oh well, it was getting old.
Buy a new toasted oven. 2 days later, it too dies...
Having talked to a bunch of people, it sounds like I may have some kind of
short. Not enough to blow a fuse, but enough to draw extra current, thereby
causing an overload at the appliance. I do NOT want to simply replace the
outlets for fear that I'll either blow up another toaster over OR worse, mask a
bigger problem.
I understand that one can perform some measurements on the circuit to determine
if there is a short. Does anyone know how or with what kind of meter? Where is
the best place to get such a meter?
-mark
|
290.11 | Little yellow gadget | NUWAVE::SUNG | Al Sung (Xway Development) | Wed Aug 06 1986 14:23 | 7 |
| There's a little gadget that looks like a plug with 3 prongs. It
has 3 different colored LEDs. You simply plug this gadget into
the socket and sequence of LEDs appears. You then look it up on
your quickie reference card. House inspectors use these things.
They are usually yellow and I've seen them at Spags (where else!)
-al
|
290.12 | | MOSAIC::GALLAGHER | | Wed Aug 06 1986 14:23 | 36 |
| Mark, what you are describing does *not sound like a short circuit.
A short circuit is just what the name implies, an incomplete travel
or current, and an immediate short path to ground through the easiest
root. If you had a short (a hot and a neutral touching for example)
you would immediately blow a fuse or trip the breaker. This would
also happen in the case of an intermittent short caused say by bad
wiring in the applicance. The testor used to trace shorts is called
a continuity testor. There are many different types, but basically
(simply stated) it is a testor with a bulb, a battery and two test
leads that are really an open switch. You use it by turning off
the juice in the circuit, touching the leads to both the hot and
the common or the the hot and the ground in the circuit. If a short
exists, that means that somewhere along the circuit path these two
wires are in contact with each other. In the testor, this will
then close the circuit, and the light will come on indicating a
short. If the light does not come on, no short.
However, reading the description of your problem and your account
of how you went about removing and replacing outlets, I think I
know what your problem may be. Take a multitestor and look for
a plug giving you 230 volts. If, when you reattached the wires
to your plugs, you attached two hots, to one plug, and either the
ground or the common to the third prong (the ground in the plug)
you have inadverdently added a 230 volt plug to your kitchen. And
because both of the appliances you burned out were heat elements
they would not necessarily burn out right away, as opposed to say
a radio, or something electronic.
You should look into and fix this ASAP. It could be a dangerous
situation.
Good luck
/Dave
the suspected short)
"short path
|
290.13 | No 220 in a backspash | NUWAVE::SUNG | Al Sung (Xway Development) | Wed Aug 06 1986 14:31 | 8 |
| Re: .2
If the house was wired correctly when it was built, it would
be impossible to get 220-230 volts out of the wire from a kitchen
backsplash. 220 wiring is much different than 120 wiring and 220
is usually only wired to the electric stove, electric dryer and
an electric hot water heater.
-al
|
290.14 | Not Always True | JUNIOR::CAMBERLAIN | | Wed Aug 06 1986 15:24 | 21 |
| RE: 2
I disagree that if there is a short it will "always blow the fuse"!
You can have shorts that will give you a good "shock" , but not
blow the fuse. This can be do to wrong value fuse, or length of
wire.
My question is the outlet properly grounded? Is the whole circuit
properly grounded.
One other quick check is to take a meter read from the neutral
(normally) the white wire to a pipe at the sink, read from the ground
(Bare wire) to the pipe, and the metal box to the pipe. None should
show any voltage! Beware that there is no plastic pipes. To test
for this, use the meter to read from the Black wire to the pipe
and it should read approx. 110 volts!
-Mike_
|
290.15 | Might be 240 in his outlet | MOZART::LEWIS | Please...no wagering. | Wed Aug 06 1986 16:16 | 24 |
|
re: .3 and others
I think .0 said he didn't disconnect any wires, but I guess there's a
remote chance that maybe some wirecaps were shaken loose or something
similar that might have coincidentally caused 240 to get to the wrong
places. The code requires that all kitchen counter outlets each have
two independent 20-amp circuits. This can be done by breaking off the
tab between the two screw connectors on the hot side of each duplex
outlet and running 12/3 fed by two separate breakers to each outlet
box. Each of the two hot wires of the 12/3 is connected to a hot-side
screw of the duplex outlet. The way panel boxes are usually set up,
each two adjacent breakers actually have 240 volts between them (as do
many other pairs - half of the possible combinations), since the
incoming line is 240 volts with a neutral center tap (each 120 circuit
is one leg of the 240 and the neutral) and each of the hot wires
zig-zags down the back of the panel where the breakers are plugged in.
So, if my assumptions are correct, there may, in fact be 240 volts
present in his backsplash boxes.
Make sense?
- Rich
|
290.16 | Ask a question, get conflicting answers! | OLORIN::SEGER | | Wed Aug 06 1986 16:45 | 32 |
| >The code requires that all kitchen counter outlets each have
>two independent 20-amp circuits. This can be done by breaking off the
>tab between the two screw connectors on the hot side of each duplex
>outlet and running 12/3 fed by two separate breakers to each outlet
>box.
Really? I never heard this one before, though I'm not completely up on the code
either.
Anyhow, there is only 1 wire coming into the box. The way it was wired is that
the leads are cut about 8 inches from the end and the insulation slid back
enough to fit in the lugs of one outlet. Then another half inch is removed
from the end and the wire connected to the other outlet. The result is no
double wires on a single post. Actually, it's a rather cleaver technique.
The main point here is that the stupid thing used to work and I didn't touch
it! I know nothing got screwed up in the breaker box because I never touched
the box. In fact, I removed the outlets while they were live (I know that's
not wise, but it is relatively safe if you're careful). As a comment, I have
added about 4 or 5 circuits over the last 6 months, though I doubt if this
would affect things.
As to the earlier comment about a SHORT always blowing the fuse, I've been
assured by most people I've talked to (including my brother-in-law who used
to be an electrician) that this is NOT always the case. In fact he referred
me to the magic yellow device with the LED's. I sort of suspected they sold
them at SPAG's but haven't yet had the chance to get there.
Now that I need that device AND the stud finded, my list is at the point were
it once again is time to make a SPAG's run...
-mark
|
290.17 | Open 3-wire ckt maybe? | MRMFG1::D_BROUILLET | Don Brouillet @ MRO | Wed Aug 06 1986 16:49 | 17 |
| .5 makes sense if there are 2 seperate circuits to each outlet,
although I've never seen that. One other thing to look for -
electricians like to hook up "3-wire circuits", which is basically
a shared neutral between 2 primary circuits of different phases.
If the neutral wire is opened at some point, it is possible to have
230 volts across the outlet if loads are connected on both circuits.
I would suggest doing some simple checks with a voltmeter first:
Hot to neutral = 120V
Hot to gnd = 120V
Neutral to gnd = 0V (or pretty close to it)
You could also check ground continuity between the outlet ground
and a cold water pipe, but I've never seen a toaster with a grounding
prong - this problem sounds like too much voltage between the two
poles.
|
290.18 | check for overvoltage | LATOUR::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Wed Aug 06 1986 17:03 | 21 |
|
Agree with .5: It is entirely possible to get 220 into an outlet
box with conventional wiring; however, correct wiring of the
receptacles should guarantee that 220 is not presented to the outside
world unless that was the intention. 220 will certainly kill a
toaster oven in short order (you should see what it does to blenders).
Grounding is usually ruled out in this situation simply because
the typical counter appliance does not use a grounded cord. In any
case, improper grounding should *never* contribute to the
malfunctioning of such an appliance - it should just remove a level
of safety when the product does malfunction.
Any in-the-outlet-box, greater-than-0-resistance, unintentional
current bridge will have no apparent affect on the appliance,
and may cause lots of heat and smoke to emanate from the wall.
Bad connections will produce extended appliance life and very
light toast, along with heat and smoke as above.
Let us know how it turns out.
|
290.19 | current loads | SVCRUS::KROLL | | Wed Aug 06 1986 17:36 | 13 |
| There is one other possibility that has been over looked. Check
out how may appliances or plugs are on a circuit. Turn off a circuit
breaker and check to see what is off at the plug and what is not.
We had this problem and found out that the microwave (witch burned
out) was connected to the refrigerator and the dishwasher. when
all three items turned on the currect whould drop and blow up the
microwave. I have also notice that the popular wall plug for this
area is the rated 15 amp and some times they start melting when
being used for a 20 amp appliance.
been there
charla
|
290.20 | how bright do LEDs get? | Q::ROSENBAUM | Rich Rosenbaum | Wed Aug 06 1986 19:14 | 4 |
| Wow. Ten replies in one day (doesn't anyone work here?).
If you are buying (or have) both a voltmeter and a LED tester, I'd
suggest using the voltmeter first...
|
290.21 | VOM first, LED later... | JOET::JOET | Thela hun ginjeet | Wed Aug 06 1986 19:20 | 8 |
| re: .10
I was about to say the same thing. I can understand burning out a
microwave or a refrigerator by keeping it "browned out" via a partial
short or a bad connection, but a toaster oven? What can you do to a
resistance element except overdrive it?
-joet
|
290.22 | | COLORS::GALLAGHER | | Thu Aug 07 1986 15:13 | 38 |
|
RE: .3 and others:
>If the house was wired correctly when it was built it would be
>impossible to get 220-230 volts out of the wire from a kitchen
>backslash.
The other response about split outlets (an outlet having two plugs
each on a seperate circuit) being part code.
Folks, how many houses are in exact conformity with current code.
Just about every house the have ever lived in and/or worked in has
exibited some code violations. Plus the don't forget that many
local codes overide national code. For example, some towns require
kitchen outlets to be on a ground fault circuit. And all codes
now require ground fault protection in bathrooms and outdoor electrical
outlets. However, you won't find any of this in a 20 or a 30 year-old
house.
So when I am confronted with a wiring problem, I usually *never*
assume that the place was wired correctly originally. I know,
have seen and (groan) have fixed most of the short cuts.
Number .2 if you think that it would be impossible to get 220-230
volts of a kitchen outlet, take a sloppy wiring job, say where you've
got two hots from separate circuits coming into the outlet box.
If these have come from different sides of the bus bar in the main
panel, put them into one plug and you've got 230 volts for sure.
To confuse matters even more, what if an electician has gotten sloppy,
reversed his connections (that is used white wire to carry hot,
black to carry neutral on one circuit, and wired the other circuit
correctly). So you come along, presume everything is OK, and put
the black on the gold plug lugs, and the white on the silver plug
lugs, then attach the ground. Now plug an 115 volt appliance in
turn it on and kiss it goodbye.
Not to flame, but the point is that in an older house, especially
when multiple handymen have been practicing their craft...."It ain't
what its supposed to be" more often than not.
|
290.23 | Correction, etc. | MOZART::LEWIS | Please...no wagering. | Thu Aug 07 1986 15:57 | 44 |
|
re: .6,.7, etc.
Mark, you got me on that one! I should have looked it up first.
The minimum that the code requires for a kitchen is two 20A circuits
to supply countertop appliances and no other loads (lighting, fridge,
etc.) and there must be at least one outlet for each countertop greater
than 12 inches wide. I was told by a former electrician that some
*inspectors* require that this be implemented as the "3-wire" circuit
that I described in .5 (I didn't know it was called that, .7, but it
does make sense - am I correct that we're talking about the same
thing?), but this is not actually in the NEC. A lot of electricians
do this anyway, since they can save wire (money) by running one 12/3
instead of two 12/2 cables. It also has some voltage drop advantages.
But this is probably irrelevant to .0, since he said there's only one
circuit in his boxes in .6. Also, Mark, I didn't mean to imply that you
had done anything to your panel - I just described the usual setup to
back up my assertion that there might be 240v in your kitchen. Sorry
about the confusion and implications.
I think .9 may be onto something, though, since you mentioned in
.6 that you added 4-5 circuits recently. Load balancing is very
important - you should have roughly equal loads on each leg of your
incoming line. If this is not the case, the load is shifted more to
one side. I thought this usually caused breakers to blow a lot, but I
wonder if it may be just shifting the voltages enough to blow your
toaster-oven instead??? When you use the voltmeter, try re-creating the
load conditions on all your circuits when the oven died - then again,
this would require the oven to be on, too.
re: .10
Some of your replies have some rather interesting timestamps :-)
re: .12
"Not to flame, but" what's your point? Every other reply has
offered constructive advice, based on implicit and explicit assumptions
(should we have wasted pages and pages listing them?). Should we assume
that no houses are built to code? I've dealt with one inspector who
really scrutinizes everything. Also, who said it was an older house?
- Rich
|
290.24 | Try a lamp? | GALLO::PALMIERI | | Thu Aug 07 1986 16:11 | 8 |
| I was thinking that if you didn't have any type of tester you might
try plugging in a table lamp and see what happens. I would expect
it to be extremely bright for a very short time before the filament
self-destructed. This would give you a clue about the voltage and
not cost as much as an oven.
Marty
|
290.25 | everyone wants to be an electrician! :-) | OLORIN::SEGER | | Thu Aug 07 1986 16:30 | 33 |
| Wow... I guess there are a lot of us who like to play with wiring.
Just to add a few more facts which may add to the confusion I'm having:
o the house is only 7 years old
o the outlet has worked with no problems for at least the 9 months
I lived there before "problems" started to occur, which makes be
want to believe the outlet is at least wired correctly
o if i plug in the toaster oven or a lamp, they works fine. I
don't know if I'm dealing with an intermitten problem or just a
very slow overload
o my wife says that the day before the toaster oven died it came
on by itself! i've been afraid to mention that one for fear of
being locked up, but I DO believe her
o the mention about load balancing in the breaker box is
interesting, especially since I know NOTHING of the subject.
however, suffice it to say that one circuit runs a freezer and
another runs a dehumidifier, both of which are high wattage
devices and both of which run a lot
o I haven't used that outlet for a couple of months and nothing
else has died.
I guess my next assignment is to go home and take some voltage readings, which
I suspect will be correct. Forgive me if I don't publish any results for a
couple of days, but I probably won't get around to looking at it until this
weekend.
-mark
|
290.26 | neutral problems maybe | TROLL::DCOTE | Dave (Peck) Cote | Wed Aug 13 1986 17:24 | 24 |
| In my parents house, we once lost the neutral line coming in,
and very strange things were happening!
Turning on certain lights would cause others to come on
and different combinations of lights and things would cause
different brightnesses or appliance speeds.
Appliances on the two 110V circuits were being put in series
across the now 220V, and varying loads on either would vary
the voltage drops. Let me illustrate:
110V -------------------------\ now in series
\ across 220V
appliance 1 (try it!)
broken /
neutral -/ /------------<
\
appliance 2
/
110V -------------------------/
I also have seen those 'split' (?) sockets wired with two 110V
circuits, you could be experiencing this right there.
|
290.27 | Can someone explain? | Q::ROSENBAUM | Rich Rosenbaum | Wed Aug 13 1986 19:50 | 9 |
| re:.-1
I find this odd. I would think that all neutrals on outlets would
have to be wired directly back to the service panel and not spliced
before that (with the exception of the split outlet). Even if the
neutral connection between the box and the pole was broken, the
neutral buss bar is grounded in the box.
No?
|
290.28 | My Guess | CHOPIN::LEWIS | Please...no wagering. | Thu Aug 14 1986 12:42 | 37 |
| re: .17
Here's my guess: Does the ground really provide a good (near-zero-ohm)
conduction path between the power plant and your house? I'll assume not, or
else the power companies have been wasting an awful lot of money on neutral wire
all these years! So the model for .16 would be a very long resistor between the
generator and his panel box. Or, is the neutral of the generator actually
grounded at the power plant? If not (I think this is more likely the case, to
avoid a ground loop), this could also explain it. In either case, here's what
it may look like:
G 110V -------------------------\
E \
N R2 = some ckts
E /
R 0V ----^v^v^v^v^v^v^v-------< P
A R1 \
T R3 = the rest
O /
R -110V ------------------------/
where R1 is >0 ohms (neutral grounded at generator) or even infinite impedance
(neutral not grounded at generator). So, without going into a lot of equations
(trust me), there are a few voltage dividers at work here, so when R2 and/or R3
change (turning something on or off) the voltage at P changes. If P were, say,
30 volts, you'd actually have 80v in part of your house and 140v in the rest
(could be a lot worse!). If R2 = R3, things are normal regardless of the value
of R1 (including open), since no net current would flow through that part of the
circuit and you're left with one voltage divider that equally splits the volt-
age, due to the equal loads. (This is how 3-wire circuits have lower voltage
drops, when the load on either side is near equal, since the conduction path for
either side is effectively "shorter".)
Anyway, do I win?
- Rich
|
290.29 | Broken Socket | GENRAL::HUNTER | from SUNNY Colorado, Wayne | Fri Aug 15 1986 22:03 | 30 |
| A broken ground or neutral could occur. Electrical outlets,
lights, etc, in a house are wired in parallel. However, the outlet
or fixture itself is part of the circuit. By pulling the fixture
out of the box in the wall, the connection between the two screws
could have been broken. This would open either the neutral or HOT
side of the circuit. Without a neutral attached to the outlet,
the HOT side can float at any potential between 0 and 440 volts
in a regular house. The ground lead then becomes the neutral for
the reference voltage for the circuit. If neutral current is flowing
in one side of the open and not in the other, the voltage at the
appliance or light will float to an amount equal to the difference
in phase, voltage, and current induced voltage in the associated
circuits.
the author of .0 possibly broke the connection between the two
sections on the neutral side of the socket in the box. To find
this, get a small multi-meter from Radio Shack or ???? or borrow
one, set the unit for 200 to 400 volts AC max scale. place one
probe in one side of the outlet and the other probe in the other
side. Measure voltage. Should be about 110 to 120. If higher
than this, you have a broken neutral. Now measure the voltage between
each slot in the socket and the GROUND pin. One side of the socket
to ground should be about 110 volts and the other side should be
0. Do this test for both sides of the socket. If one side measures
correct and the other doesn't, the connection between the two screws
IS BROKEN. This will not only burn out appliances, but can be a
hazzard to your health. Another test for a bad socket is to put
the probes in the slot on the same side of the socket of both sockets.
Should read 0 volts for all measurements. If not, bad socket.
Can elaborate further on reasons for varied voltage of socket
if you wish. Send mail to nermal::HUNTER.
|
290.30 | re .19 | LATOUR::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Thu Aug 21 1986 12:56 | 8 |
| Assuming that the toaster oven in question does not use a grounded
plug, and that in any case it is improper for an appliance to use
a ground connection to complete a current path (except during
malfunction), .19 would not seem to apply.
Also, how can the hot lead float in reference to the ground if the
neutral connection is broken, when all neutral and ground leads
are tied together at the main box?
|
290.31 | Neutral = Ground? | GENRAL::HUNTER | from SUNNY Colorado, Wayne | Fri Aug 22 1986 20:28 | 30 |
| re -.1
You are correct in stating that the neutrals and grounds SHOULD
be connected at the breaker panel. If the jumper connection on
the recepticle is broken, however, one neutral side of the unit
is now floated from the other side. If the appliance plugged into
it has NO ground pin, the appliance uses any possible path it can
to get back to the breaker box. Most probably some other appliance
which is plugged into the same circuit with a 3 wire plug using
the ground pin. Now, the reference circuit (NEUTRAL) is through
the other appliance's ground pin back to the breaker panel. If
the house is wired with 12-2 with ground, the return resistance
is high with respect to what it would be if the NEUTRAL wire were
connected. If one of the other appliances on the same broken neutral
circuit has a power line filter in it, the leakage current capacitors
in the filter cause the NEUTRAL to now float at some potential with
respect to GROUND and PHASE. Depending on the phasing of the voltage
caused by the filter, the NEUTRAL now has VOLTAGE on it. This can
cause the voltage that the appliance sees to vary considerably with
changes in load and time. It also causes unusually LARGE transient
signals to be found on the lines with no neutral. Since these can
be present now on the NEUTRAL, plugging other things into the circuit
will cause large voltage surges to be seen by the toaster or other
appliances on the line since only the HI side of the line is switched
or disconnected when the unit is OFF. This can also cause premature
failure. Check the wall socket to make sure that you didn't
accidentally break the connecting strip if you remove a socket from
the wall box. Not only can this problem of broken NEUTRAL be a
nuisance in short failure times of units attached to it, it can
also be very SHOCKING if more than 1 item with a power filter is
attached to the open side of the circuit.
|
290.56 | 100amp vs 200amp service | CLT::DAMORE | | Wed Aug 27 1986 18:09 | 19 |
| <<< PARITY::SYS$SYSDEVICE:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CONSUMER.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Consumer Related Issues >-
================================================================================
Note 363.0 New contrcution - electricity 5 replies
CLT::DAMORE 12 lines 27-AUG-1986 08:29
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I am haveing a house built for me and there is a question I need
answered. The current plan for elctricity in the house willbe 100
Amp service. Now I have someone STRONGLY recomending to me that
I should get 200 Amp service in the house, and I will regret it
in the future if I don't. Resale purposes, extra juice etc. The
house is in Brookline N.H. Does anyone else out there have an opinion
about this?? I would appreciate any/all comments.
Thanks,
Andy
|
290.57 | Go for the 200 amp. | WHOARU::HARDING | | Wed Aug 27 1986 18:33 | 6 |
|
Take it from one who does regret it. Go for the 200 amp service.
It is well worth the extra cost.
dave
|
290.58 | goforit | MAXWEL::BROSNIHAN | BRIAN | Wed Aug 27 1986 19:13 | 2 |
| I had the 100amp put in and am happy..... The price difference
is minimal .....................go for the 200
|
290.59 | Amperage = Possibilities! | WOOF::VISCAROLA | Peter Viscarola | Wed Aug 27 1986 20:47 | 12 |
| Of course it really depends on the size of the house, doesn't it.
I just finished having a house built in Nashua, and insisted
on 200 AMP service.
200 AMP service is almost always a much better bet. By the
time you hookup an electric oven, and stove, and plug in your
microwave, (and setup your table saw, etc ad infinitum) you'll
be glad you got the 200 AMP service.
It's easy, and relatively inexpensive, now... More of a pain
later.
|
290.60 | ONE MORE YES VOTE | JUNIOR::CAMBERLAIN | | Thu Aug 28 1986 11:33 | 7 |
| I also agree with .1 -.3!
I have been remodeling my home for five years and to do it right
I had to upgrade to 200 AMP Service. It is well worth the cost.
-Mike-
|
290.61 | Do it! | STAR::FARNHAM | Stu Farnham, VMS | Thu Aug 28 1986 11:38 | 4 |
|
Easier and cheaper to do it now, even if you're not SURE you need
it. Eventually you (or prospective buyers) will want it.
|
290.62 | Great! One more question please. | CLT::DAMORE | | Thu Aug 28 1986 12:38 | 7 |
| Thanks all. One more question though. I am going to talk to the
builder today (at lunch). You all say it is minimal in cost. Could
someone throw around some figures so when I talk to him I knwo what
to look for. This is my first house and all, I'm new at this sort
of thing.
Thanks and I woudl appreciate quick responses!!
|
290.63 | | PICA::BLANCHETTE | Bob | Thu Aug 28 1986 15:09 | 13 |
| It's been 7 years since I last installed a service panel,
so I imagine prices have risen since then, but I think
I paid $85 for the breaker box. Since the one I bought
(200 amp) was identical to the one I replaced (100 amp),
except for the main breaker, I would expect the price
to be about the same.
The only item which would raise the cost, would be the
wire running between the meter and the service panel.
You'll need a larger gauge for the 200 amp, which could
cost an extra dollar or two per foot.
-Bob B.
|
290.64 | | LATOUR::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Thu Aug 28 1986 15:25 | 8 |
| re .7
For 200-amp service, you also need a solid conduit from the roof
connection to the meter, along with a large weather connection at
the top of the conduit, and heavier wire within the conduit.
Is there also heavier line from the pole to the roof connection?
Who pays for it?
|
290.65 | in N.H. only | COBRA::DUTHIE | | Thu Aug 28 1986 16:25 | 10 |
| In N.H., Public Service Co. supplies the meter socket, and everything
on the street side of it (weatherhead, cable down side of house,
etc). You're only added cost will be for the heavier wire from
the meter socket to the main panel, and the larger main panel.
The cable from the meter socket to the main should be quite short,
so the cost difference there should be small. The larger breaker
panel will probably run about $75 more than the 100 amp one. Your
total added actual cost should be about $100. (but the contracter
will probably want some extra profit on it too.....)
jim d.
|
290.66 | go for the 200 in the house | ELWOOD::TANZER | | Thu Aug 28 1986 16:59 | 8 |
| -< in MA >-
I just had a seperate service put in my garage (240V/100 AMP). I was
told by the electrician that it would cost about another $150.00
in PARTS (bigger wire, box, etc) to go with 200 AMP. I chose the
100 AMP service for the garage since I will be the only one out
there working and I can really only operate one machine at a time.
If I were wiring a house, I'd install 200 Amp without hesitation.
|
290.67 | You made it easier. | CLT::DAMORE | | Fri Aug 29 1986 13:03 | 11 |
| Thanks all. I was leaning towards 200 Amp anyway, but the overwhelming
support has only made it easier, even with the added cost. Just
have to get the contracter off his butt, they like to do things
the easy way you know. Pushing him will be a chore, but far from
impossible.
Thanks Again,
Andy
ps. Feel free to keep adding on hear, I still like to hear all opinions.
|
290.68 | | FURILO::JOHNSON | Peter Johnson | Fri Aug 29 1986 13:48 | 9 |
| As indicated cost upgrade should me minimum. Make sure the contractor
does not try to gouge you. It takes the same labor to install one over
the other - same amount of work.
On my house 3 years ago I made them rip out the 100 amp box and service
wire that was on the house and install 200 amp service. My cost was
$75 which I thought was about right.
-peter
|
290.69 | Now I need names | CLT::DAMORE | | Tue Sep 02 1986 13:05 | 9 |
| Ok Folks. Now I need the names of good honest electricians that
would service the Brookline N.H. area. My contractor told me that
the electrician wants $350 to do the work. I presume from everyones
comments that this is a high, so I will see what it costs to have
100 Amp service ripped out and replaced with 200, after I have moved
in. The eclectrician is just being a lazy S.O.B.!
Thanks,
Andy
|
290.70 | Pay me now or pay me later! | AMTVS2::KEVIN | | Tue Sep 02 1986 16:51 | 10 |
| I've gotten estimates for upgrading to 200 amp service that are
in the 700-800 range. The thicker cable costs more, the meter box
costs more, the panel costs more, the conduit (if needed) costs
more, it's more of a pain to run thicker wire, etc.
The moral: Don't cut off your nose to spite your face. If the
electrician wants 350 now, he may want 700 later and it may actually
cost somewhere near 350 for the increment in materials cost.
Kevin
|
290.71 | What's included? | WOOF::VISCAROLA | Peter Viscarola | Wed Sep 03 1986 17:05 | 11 |
| It was a $450 upgrade to have 200 amp service installed when I had my
house built. So, $350 ain't necessarily so bad...
Perhaps your electrician assumes, as did mine, that since you want/need
200 amp service you'll want/need more circuits and outlets... so
he's factoring in the cost now.
Either that, or we've BOTH been gouged!!
Peter
|
290.72 | ex | ECAD::SCHIPANI | | Thu Sep 04 1986 15:22 | 8 |
| I just had some electrical work done in Nashua. Excellent job, fair
price. Guys name was, Don Gilbride. He's in Chelmsford, MA, but
does a lot of work in NH. I think he's worth a call.
617 256 6077 is his home. Leave a message and he'll get back to
you.
Gary
|
290.73 | | JOET::JOET | | Thu Sep 04 1986 16:14 | 3 |
| Last summer, our upgrade cost $400.
-joet
|
290.74 | | FURILO::JOHNSON | Peter Johnson | Fri Sep 05 1986 12:30 | 12 |
| re: 15 and 17
Looking at just how much the difference in parts cost is between 100
amp service and 200 amp service and knowing that the labor to install
either is about the same I believe being charged $350 to $400 for an
upgrade (this assumes just a new panel and service wire - not a bunch
more ciruits wired) is a blatant rip-off. As I said elsewhere, I paid
$75 which I thought was reasonable. By the way this cost included
removing the old panel and wire which had already been installed but
not wired up yet.
-peter
|
290.75 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | | Mon Sep 08 1986 15:19 | 5 |
| A friend of mine is thinking of getting a new service entrance for
his house; it is presently 30 amps (!). Cost difference between
100 and 200 amp service was quoted as about $200.
Steve
|
290.125 | adding an electrical panel | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Mon Oct 06 1986 16:03 | 5 |
| Anyone ever added a second electrical panel? Where
do you hook into the first one? What kind of wire should
be used for the feeder to the second panel?
|
290.126 | Well it depends... | STAR::SWIST | Jim Swist ZKO1-1/D42 381-1264 | Mon Oct 06 1986 19:25 | 20 |
| The second panel looks like another 220v circuit to the main panel.
You have to find a spare double slot in the main box for the circuit
breaker for the submain box.
The two boxes are connected using 3-wire plus ground cable. VERY
IMPORTANT - the grounds in the submain all float to the neutral
in that box (the principle is that ground can only connect to neutral
at a single point in the system to avoid ground loops).
The size of the wire is completely a function of the number of circuits
in the submain and the size of the main to submain breaker. There
are a number of rules to determine these but first you have to figure
out your needs in the submain. See the national electrical code
or one of the books which explains it in English.
This is not an operation I would recommend for the beginning DIY
electrician.
Jim
|
290.127 | Details needed; Safety factors | JOET::PHILM | No job too small, no fee too big. | Mon Oct 06 1986 20:23 | 61 |
| I need some more information to answer your installation-specific
variables, such as:
1) Is this panel to be adjacent to the main panel, or a sub panel
separated by some distance?
2) Is your main panel equipped with fuses or circuit breakers?
3) What is the amperage rating of your main panel, and what is the
capacity of the panel you wish to add?
The basic details are that if you have a fuse panel, you tie in
to the two large lugs, usually located adjacent to the screw terminals
for the screw-in (plug) fuses for the "hot" wires, and to a large
lug on the neutral bus for the neutral wire. This essentially taps
the output of the main fuses, and feeds it to the sub-panel. Most
fuse panels have a sticker attached to the cover showing the internal
connections just described. Available current is limited to the
rating of the main fuses in the original panel for the combined
panels.
With a circuit breaker panel, you must have space available to mount
a two-pole breaker of capacity adequate to match that of your sub
panel. This breaker feeds the sub panel "hot" wires, neutral again
goes to the neutral bus.
Wires to feed the sub-panel must be sized according to the amperage
rating of the sub panel, and you must determine if the two panels
can accomodate copper and/or aluminum conductors to select the correct
type. Panels and breakers are marked cu/al if compatible with both
types. Amperage capacities vs wire size can be found in the National
Electrical Code book, and other references. Note that aluminum
conductors must be larger than copper for equivalent ampacity. (yes
ampacity is a real word.)
A word on grounding the sub-panel: the neutral and panel frame (steel
case) of the sub panel must NOT be bonded. This means that a fourth
conductor must be used to supply the safety ground in the sub panel,
and a separate ground bus bar must be installed in the sub panel.
The easiest way to achieve this (if the panels are adjacent) is
to use a steel conduit nipple and locknuts to bond the cases of
the panels together; the conduit acts as the fourth (safety ground)
conductor. You can then bolt the safety ground bus bar to the frame
of the sub panel, and attach the branch circuit grounds (bare wires)
there.
The reason for this is the safety aspect in the event that the neutral
conductor to the sub panel fails. If the neutral opened, AND the
neutral WAS bonded to the frame of the sub panel, AND there was
a metal connection I.E. conduit between the panels, neutral current
would flow on the conduit, rather than on the intended wire. This
is unsafe because steel is a less conductive metal, and also would
present a shock hazard if the conduit became loose.
Using no fourth conductor at all would leave you without a ground
of any sort in the sub panel in the event of a neutral conductor
failure.
I've said a lot more than I intended, pardon my verbosity. I went
into detail for the sake of safety, and to prevent an inspector
from possibly lynching you.
|
290.128 | co vs cu | Q::ROSENBAUM | Rich Rosenbaum | Tue Oct 07 1986 16:36 | 6 |
| re .-1: Panels and breakers are marked cu/al if compatible with both
types.
At least with switches and receptacles, the currently approved marking
is CO/ALR. Perhaps it still is CU/AL on panels?
|
290.129 | Second panel | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Tue Oct 07 1986 19:37 | 14 |
| To answer the questions in .2:
The second panel is for an addition and will be about 30 feet away
from the first one.
The main panel has circuit breakers, and is 4 years old.
It's 200 amps.
I'm planning to buy a panel at spags, hang it up, and put in the
breakers, and wire the addition. Then when it's all done, I'll
hook up this second panel to the first one. Do you see any problem
with doing it like this?
Thanks.
|
290.130 | | REGINA::DCL | David Larrick | Tue Oct 07 1986 20:26 | 28 |
| I've got a similar project underway - wiring an addition - and considered
adding a sub-panel.
I was advised by several people just to run the new circuits from the main
panel instead: they argued that the cost of the new box plus 30 feet of #6
cable would pay for a lot of 30-foot runs of Romex. Since the main box has
the slots available, and since I was somewhat uncomfortable working with
the big wire and its high ampacity, I took this advice.
A mitigating factor is that I'm ripping out a lot of knob-and-tube from the
basement, so I have lots of pre-drilled holes in the joists to run my new
Romex through. Good thing too, since those 85-year-old joists are tough!
Running 3-wire circuits (see NEC, or Richter's "Wiring Simplified") cuts in
half the number of cables you have to run. Saves some money too, and helps
balance your phase loading.
If you're low on slots, consider piggyback breakers (although my town
wiring inspector tells me they're not going to be available much longer -
anybody know anything about this?).
The great dramatic cutover you plan - wiring up the sub-panel and then
energizing it - is clean and simple, but lacks flexibility. You can't, for
example, get some of your new circuits hot, then use them to power
worklights and tools for the rest of the job. Working from my existing
box, I'm able to isolate what I'm working on well enough. It takes some
organization and thought, of course, and I keep a circuit tester handy to
make sure I really killed the circuit I wanted to....
|
290.131 | adding a panel | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Oct 08 1986 11:55 | 10 |
| re: .5 I can't do it the way you're doing because my current
30 slot panel is full. Also, it's convenient enough for me to
run extension cords over to the addition while I'm working on it.
I went to spags last night but didn't know which panel I needed.
They have one with 20 slots and a main, and one with 8 slots and
no main. I expect to use 2 - 15 amps for outlets, and 3 20-amps
for electric heaters. So do I need a main for this secondary
panel?
|
290.132 | | LATOUR::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Fri Oct 10 1986 11:09 | 9 |
|
The panel's main breaker protects the panel from drawing more
current than its design limit. For a secondary panel, if its
feeder cable is protected at the main panel by a breaker rated
at or below the current limit of the secondary panel, no main
breaker is required at the secondary panel.
How are you planning to feed power to the secondary panel?
|
290.133 | Adding a secondary panel | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Fri Oct 10 1986 11:23 | 4 |
| Ok, it sounds like all I do is attach the second panel via a 100 amp breaker
in the first panel. Right? So, the panel I can use is the
one with 8 slots, and no breaker?
|
290.134 | Wiring a sub-panel | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Tue Nov 11 1986 13:16 | 20 |
| This was the question about adding the subpanel for an addition.
I've got the subpanel installed and am ready to hook it up to the
main panel via a 60 amp breaker in the main panel. (What size wire
goes with 60 amp?)
So do I use 4 conductor plus ground wire? I assume the black and
white wires go from the 60 amp breaker to the subpanel mains.
And the ground goes from ground in the main to the ground bus in
the sub. Then what? I guess I hook one more wire from the ground
bus in the main to the subpanel cabinet.
The subpanel came with some attachment which seems to be used to
ground the subpanel to the subpanel's ground bus. Do I want to
use it?
I still have a 4th wire left. Or should I use 3-conductor plus
ground?
Dave
|
290.135 | Wire sizes | SWTPEA::COUTURE | | Tue Nov 11 1986 13:31 | 14 |
| As far as wire sizes for copper goes I believe it's:
15 amp > 14ga
20 amp > 12ga
30 amp > 10ga
40 amp > 8ga
50 amp > 6ga
60 amp > 4ga
If you use alum. wire for the bigger stuff use a wire size bigger
for each amp shown.
Steve
|
290.136 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Tue Nov 11 1986 16:13 | 16 |
| You want to isolate the neutral from the ground at the subpanel.
You'll need 3-conductor-plus-ground cable. Black + red (presumably)
go from the 60-amp breaker in the main box to the two "hot" input
lugs on the subpanel. The white (neutral) goes to a neutral terminal
bar in the subpanel, *INSULATED FROM THE SUBPANEL BOX*. The bare ground
wire goes to a ground terminal bar in the subpanel that has electrical
contact with the box. In effect, you wire the subpanel just like
any other box, grounding the box with the bare ground wire and
pretending the white neutral wire is "hot".
Then, when you wire a circuit off the subpanel the black wire for
the circuit comes off the breaker, the white wire goes to the neutral
terminal bar, and the bare ground goes to the ground terminal bar.
Unlike at the main box, you do *NOT* connect the neutral and ground
to the same terminal bar. Keep 'em separate.
At least, that's my understanding of how it's all supposed to be
done.
|
290.137 | neutral=ground at service only... | REMEDY::KOPEC | Sleeping on the interstate... | Tue Nov 11 1986 16:30 | 9 |
| Yes, you use 3 conductor with ground, and you don't bond the ground
to the neutral in the subpanel; NEC says that the only place you
can connect ground to neutral is at the service disconnect (load
side, I think... but it usually doesn't matter 'cuz the neutral
in rarely opened by the disconnect).
Careful in the main panel; don't fry yourself!
...tek
|
290.138 | Adding a panel | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Tue Nov 11 1986 16:42 | 11 |
| So in the subpanel, I ground the panel to one of the terminal
bars and connect all the bare ground wires to it; including the
bare wire from the main panel, and all bare wires from the incoming
circuits.
I connect the white wire from the ground on the main to the second
terminal bar on the subpanel, and connect all incoming circuit's
white wires to it. The panel has a removable connection between
the two terminal grounding bars. I assume that gets removed.
|
290.139 | | OOLA::OUELLETTE | Roland, you've lost your towel! | Tue Nov 11 1986 17:02 | 15 |
| re: .12
The ground/neutral connection is *NEVER* disconnected by anything.
re: .13
Yes, in the subpannel box, you remove the bonding strip which
connects the ground_ing_ bus (bare copper stuff) from the
ground_ed_ bus (white wire; a.k.a. neutral).
re: aluminum wire
If you use the stuff, make sure that you use approved
connectors. Aluminum wires and connectors designed for copper
wire don't mix, may open the circuit, may cause high resistance
paths, and may cause fires or electrocution.
R.
|
290.140 | With AL wire, use an anti-oxidation compound | SAVAGE::LOCKRIDGE | | Tue Nov 11 1986 19:20 | 15 |
|
> re: aluminum wire
>If you use the stuff, make sure that you use approved
>connectors. Aluminum wires and connectors designed for copper
>wire don't mix, may open the circuit, may cause high resistance
>paths, and may cause fires or electrocution.
In addition, besure to use an anti-oxidation compound on the wire
and connectors. Work the compound into the wire so that no surface
(or as little as possible) is left exposed especially where it mates
with the connector. To do so will allow the aluminun to oxidize
and will create a bad connection (i.e. highly resistive) which can
overheat and cause a fire!
-Bob
|
290.141 | one more question | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Tue Nov 11 1986 21:04 | 10 |
| What's all this about aluminum wire? I'm using copper.
Thanks for all the responses. I think I know how to do
it now.
But I have another basic electrical question: On a 240volt
circuit (with both the black and white wires going to the
breaker) where's the neutral? Why doesn't it need one?
For examples, electric baseboard heaters.
|
290.142 | they supply 240V by themselves | Q::ROSENBAUM | Rich Rosenbaum | Tue Nov 11 1986 21:59 | 17 |
| Quick answer:
Between the main supply wires (Red & Black) exists 240 volts.
Between the neutral and either supply wire is 120V. In general,
240V devices only require 240V, therefore no neutral connection
is required.
An electric drier is the only common exception, they typically
require both 120V and 240V and therefore use a unique electrical
socket that supplies all three wires (and is the only current household
socket that does not supply ground (except in Canada where 4 wires
are used)).
Slightly shorter answer:
Each of the supply wires (red and black) are 120 volts AC in
reference to the neutral. In addition, they are 180 degrees out
of phase, and so have 240 volts between them.
|
290.143 | 240 volt circuit | KAOFS::PATTERSON | | Wed Nov 12 1986 11:17 | 4 |
| re .16
On 240-volt circuits I think the standard is to use a red-sheathed
wire containing red and black conductors - not the normal
white-sheathed wire containing white and black conductors.
|
290.144 | Red? | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Nov 12 1986 12:09 | 3 |
| Really? Why? I've never seen red Romex cable. You mean 12-2
with red covering over red and black wires?
|
290.145 | White for Neutral only! | WMEATH::KEVIN | | Wed Nov 12 1986 12:10 | 7 |
| The code insists that you use white wire for neutral connections
only. You may use standard romex with a white, a black and a ground
for 240 volts if you tape the white wire with black tape wherever it
is exposed. (The one exception is wiring a switched overhead light
- I won't go into that).
Kevin
|
290.146 | What red wire? | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Nov 12 1986 12:14 | 6 |
| My house (in Townsend Mass) has 240 volt heaters wired with regular
12-2. One white and one black wire. Is there such thing as 12-2
with a red wire? My house passed inspection and has white wires
running to the double pole breakers. They're very exposed and not
taped black.
|
290.147 | Think it is #6 | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller | Wed Nov 12 1986 12:29 | 2 |
| I'm pretty sure for 60amp you would use #6. Don't have the book
here at work. Of course it depends on the length of the run.
|
290.148 | lost in space.. | REMEDY::KOPEC | Sleeping on the interstate... | Wed Nov 12 1986 12:47 | 26 |
| re .14 re .12: you CAN disconnect the neutral from ground if it is
disconnected simultaneously with the circuit conductors, or after
the circuit conductors. Honest. I read it last night in the NEC.
About the only time it is done is on backup generator transfer
switches, and even then it's rare (the old ground/neutral
is replaced by the new ground/neutral connection). This is
a nit.
Re: different wire for 240v 2wire circuits:
Seems to me I recall that (as somebody mentioned) you can't
use white for anything other than neutral; but just about every
house I've seen does in the case of 240v2wire. I think there
may be an exception for 240v2wire, because "neutral" is not
needed (the electric drier is actualll 240v3wire, where neutral
IS used).
In general: the rule to remember is that there are two different
concepts: EQUIPMENT GROUNDING conductors, and NEUTRAL conductors.
The only current allowed in a Grounding conductor is FAULT current;
you NEVER connect ANY part of the load to a Grounding conductor.
It's easy to get confused when you look in the main distribution
panel, because they are connected together there; but they have
to remain separate everywhere else!
|
290.149 | use insulated staples on Romex | ALEX::CONN | Alex Conn, ZKO | Wed Nov 12 1986 16:49 | 16 |
| Re: .*
One of the best discussions I have seen so far. Too bad we didn't
have it five years ago when I was trying to find all this out.
Another point:
Apparently, you are not allowed to use normal staples with Romex. You
must use insulated ones (the ones with the plastic inserts--yellow
plastic on the ones I have). The idea is that a normal cable staple
could cut through the Romex, whereas the insulated ones are much less
likely to do that. I don't know whether it is NEC or local town
rules, but I am told that the inspectors are beginning to look for
that.
Alex
|
290.150 | | ULTRA::PRIBORSKY | Tony Priborsky | Wed Nov 12 1986 19:43 | 3 |
| The insulated staples are now required by the NEC (this is according to
the electrical inspector who made me pull out all of my regular stapes
and never came back to reinspect.)
|
290.151 | wiring the subpanel | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Mon Nov 17 1986 13:14 | 12 |
| Does anyone know where I can get 30 feet of 6-3 wire for less
than my electrical supply store wants for it? (Somewhere in MA
or NH).
Spags doesn't sell it. Not even at the tackle counter.
I thought I'd be saving money by placing my subpanel for my addition
close to my addition. But I'm finding it's a lot cheaper to run
all my new circuits an extra 30 feet than to run a single 6-3 wire
for 30 feet.
Should I move my subpanel closer to the main panel?
|
290.152 | You check that one and I'll check this one! | DRUID::CHACE | | Mon Nov 17 1986 16:07 | 6 |
| A subpanel in another spot? When a light goes out, which panel is
it? Or when someone checks and finds no breakers off do they then
call the electrician? Is this legal? To code?
I would think that all panels and subpanels should (must) be in
the same location.
Kenny
|
290.153 | Try Mass Gas and Electric | SAVAGE::LOCKRIDGE | | Mon Nov 17 1986 16:15 | 17 |
| Try calling Mass Gas and Electric and tell 'em you are from DEC. (The
Nashua store at least will discount to DECies). They have stores in
Nashua, and Portsmith - Lynn, Watertown, New Bedford, Plymouth, Woburn,
and Boston, MA.
There's also an electric supply place in RT 62 heading east(?) on the
right side of the street, just into Acton or just before leaving
Maynard (I think it's Maynard Supply, but has been MANY years since
I've been there) that will discount (or wholesale) to DEC employees
if you are in the Maynard Area.
Although I seem to remember that you said you were going to use
CU wire, might be worth checking the price 4-3 in AL. I think you'll
see why most people use AL wire for that usage. :-)
-Bob
|
290.154 | aluminum wire | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Mon Nov 17 1986 16:27 | 14 |
| > Although I seem to remember that you said you were going to use
> CU wire, might be worth checking the price 4-3 in AL. I think you'll
> see why most people use AL wire for that usage. :-)
Ok, I did. It's 83 cents a foot instead of $2.30 for copper.
I guess I'll have to go back through these replies and re-read
everything about aluminum wire.
I didn't know Maynard Supply will give discounts to DEC employees
Have you gotten one? That's where I bought my subpanel, and I'll have
to get all the breakers there since Spags doesn't sell them to fit
my panel. I paid $12 for a 20 amp breaker which I thought was quite
high. It's $6 at Spags but they don't fit.
|
290.155 | | VINO::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Mon Nov 17 1986 16:53 | 7 |
| re .30 - breaker doesn't fit.
Did you tell the guy at Spag's the brand name of the panel?
From what I can see, there are about 30 major suppliers of panels,
breakers and associated hardware, but only two styles of breaker
connects, and I thought Spag's carried both styles.
|
290.156 | AL wire | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Mon Nov 17 1986 17:01 | 14 |
| The name of the panel I have is something like Seimens-Allis. It's
the brand Maynard Supply sells. Have you heard of it? None of
the electrical salesmen at Spags have. I have a breaker at home
that's from Spags and it doesn't fit the panel. Spags has a list
hanging up of panel names that their breakers will fit and ones
that they won't fit. The brand of panel I have (listed above) isn't
on their list.
So it looks like I'm going to use 30 feet of AL 4-3 wire to connect
the subpanel to the main. Is there anything else I have to know
about AL wire besides gooping some anti-oxidizing agent anywhere
I have exposed wire?
Thanks.
|
290.157 | Maynard Supply Discount? Yes. | SAVAGE::LOCKRIDGE | | Mon Nov 17 1986 17:10 | 20 |
| > I didn't know Maynard Supply will give discounts to DEC employees
> Have you gotten one? That's where I bought my subpanel, and I'll have
> to get all the breakers there since Spags doesn't sell them to fit
> my panel. I paid $12 for a 20 amp breaker which I thought was quite
> high. It's $6 at Spags but they don't fit.
I DID get a discount there, but as I said this was several years
ago. Did you tell them you were from DEC? (It USED to work).
On the inside of the breaker box it specifies the circuit breaker TYPE
to use. Be sure the breakers you get are of the same type (e.g. I have
a GE breaker box and have gotten other manufacturer's breakers for it,
by matching the "type"). I have also "modified" some left over
breakers from when I re-did my parent's house. There was (as I remember)
a plastic tab of some sort (on the breaker) to keep one from switching
breakers around in the box (so you couldn't replace a 15 amp breaker
with a 20 amp, etc) which the GE box didn't have. Removed the tab and
it fit (and works) fine.
-Bob
|
290.158 | | JOET::JOET | | Mon Nov 17 1986 18:58 | 6 |
| re: .31
Spag's doesn't carry Square-D stuff (which I have been told is the
best you can buy).
-joet
|
290.159 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Wed Nov 19 1986 11:24 | 3 |
| Re: .34
However, I'm pretty sure the breakers Spags's sells will fit Square-D
panels.
|
290.160 | SQUARE-D | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Nov 19 1986 11:47 | 4 |
| Re: .35
I'm 96% sure that Square-D is on the list of panels that SPAGS
breakers WON'T fit.
|
290.161 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Wed Nov 19 1986 12:08 | 3 |
| I could well be mistaken - I've never bought a Spag's breaker and
put it in a Square-D box.
|
290.162 | | HOW::WHITE | Willie White | Wed Nov 19 1986 13:15 | 8 |
| As I recall there are at least 3 different styles of breakers found
in the main boxes in homes. There is Square D, Cutler-Hammer, and
a universal style that fits GE, Murray, and several others. Most
discount stores carry the universal style, but not necessarily the
others.
-willie
|
290.163 | A little off the subject, but... | SAVAGE::LOCKRIDGE | | Wed Nov 19 1986 17:10 | 12 |
| RE: .34
> Spag's doesn't carry Square-D stuff (which I have been told is the
> best you can buy).
Just an aside.... It MAY be true that Square D is the best in circuit
breakers (I tend to doubt it) but when it comes to contactors, motor
controls, switches, and other industrial controls, their stuff is junk.
The best in that category is Allen-Bradley - hands down! Too bad they
don't make "stuff" for home use.
-Bob
|
290.164 | | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller | Thu Nov 20 1986 11:22 | 3 |
| There is a list on the wall in the electrical dept at SPAGS which
says which panels their breakers fit. I'm 99% sure that the ones
they carry will NOT work in a Square-D panel.
|
290.165 | Spags breaker's don't fit Square-D | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Thu Nov 20 1986 17:56 | 2 |
| I'm 100% sure. I was there this morning.
|
290.166 | only sq-d fits sq-d | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | | Fri Nov 21 1986 01:46 | 10 |
| Having worked in a supply house that sold square-d I can tell
you the only breaker that will fit a square-d panel is square-d.
This is their way of insuring sales.
also re. i forget. Be sure the breaker and sub-panel are marked cu-al
this code states that either will work safely I also belive this
is required by code.(i know it is in colorado but varies state to
state)
BTW-the reason bvehind this is the fire hazard that results over
time as oxidation forms at the junction between copper and aluminum.
|
290.167 | Mechanical crimps for ground wires | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Nov 26 1986 11:36 | 8 |
| I'm looking for something to crimp together the bare ground
wires. Has anybody seen the little copper tubes that you run
the wire through and squeeze with pliers? They are copper
tubes about 1/8 inch diameter cut to about 3/8 inch in length.
My electrician had a box of them when we did my house, and now
I want more but can't find them anywhere. Does anyone know
what I'm talking about?
|
290.168 | | SEINE::CJOHNSON | My heart belongs to Daddy! | Wed Nov 26 1986 11:47 | 3 |
| How about the new plastic wire nuts for grounds that are all the rage?
Charlie
|
290.169 | Not wire nuts. | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Nov 26 1986 12:37 | 10 |
| What are new plastic wire nuts for grounds? Where is this the rage?
Are they any different than old plastic wire nuts?
If I'm wiring an outlet and have one ground coming in and one
going out, and I want them tied together, plus have one go to the
outlet and one go to the metal box, then these little copper
tubes work great. Wire nuts won't work.
|
290.170 | A bigger wire nut will do it | LOCH::KEVIN | Kevin O'Brien | Wed Nov 26 1986 16:52 | 9 |
| There are different sizes of wire nuts. If you get the right size
you can several wires together in the box.
BTW. As I remember to ground the box and the fixture you'll only
really need 3 wires tied together with the wire nut (usually RED).
When you add the third wire make it long enough to wrap around the
screw in the box then over to the screw on the fixture.
KO
|
290.171 | | REGINA::DCL | David Larrick | Wed Nov 26 1986 17:17 | 21 |
| re .18, .19, .23, et al (white wire for non-neutral purposes)
It's good practice to put black tape on the end of a white wire that
carries hot current. The black tape (or black paint) is REQUIRED by the
NEC for 240V 2-wire. The tape reminds the next electrician that
something's not quite right here. Of course, any electrician that assumes
a white wire is neutral won't be an electrician for long...
re .24, .26 (insulated staples)
Insulated staples are required by the Massachusetts amendents to the NEC,
not by the NEC itself.
re recent (crimp lugs)
I have communicated with Keith via mail on this. One of us will no doubt
report the results here. For now, suffice it to say that I'm using
Buchanon lugs and recommend them, although they are kinda expensive.
I think there was a discussion of Buchanons elsewhere in this conference;
can someone find it and post a pointer?
|
290.172 | try T&B sta-cons | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | | Fri Nov 28 1986 21:17 | 8 |
| re.43 yes, i have seen and used them. The only vendor that I know of
for these is Thomas & betts T&B in their sta-con line of crimp
connectors. You should be able to purchase them from any electrical
supply house.
Here in colorado springs I have seen them at hugh m. woods,
napa auto parts & american electric.
-j
|
290.173 | in line crimps | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Sat Nov 29 1986 00:45 | 7 |
| RE .-1:
Thanks for the name. I'll try some electrical places.
(Or auto parts places.).
As for wire nuts, that would just add more unnecessary wires
in the boxes.
|
290.174 | No wall space for outlets | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Mon Dec 01 1986 15:40 | 9 |
| NEXT QUESTION:
I have a 20 foot wall with floor to ceiling windows. I would like
to have 1 or 2 outlets there someplace. Is there anything special
I should know about putting in floor outlets? Such as using metal
outlet plates? Or keeping the outlets covered when not in use?
In case it matters, the windows don't open. I assume the code
doesn't require that I put any outlets along that wall if I
don't want to.
|
290.175 | Elec Code outlets: Catch 22 | HEADS::OSBORN | Sally's VAXNotes Vanity Plate | Mon Dec 01 1986 15:59 | 9 |
| Wow, what an interesting question in -1.
You did remember that code requires every wall to have outlets
within 6 feet of any point on that wall (no comment about "what
if I can't put an outlet in here?").
I betcha that code outlawed floor outlets 20 years ago ... and we
have three 80-yr old outlets in the living room floor, and two in
the baseboard.
|
290.176 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Tue Dec 02 1986 11:17 | 8 |
| Floor outlets are a pain. Unless you keep them covered when not
in use the holes fill up with dirt, and unless you keep a piece
of furniture over or near them when they are in use you trip over
the plugs all the time.
There are special cover plates with screw-in coverings for floor
outlets...but I'd stronly discourgage the idea of using floor outlets.
|
290.177 | nevermind | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Tue Dec 02 1986 11:51 | 3 |
| Well, last night I started wiring the room with the floor to ceiling
windows and decided against any floor outlets.
|
290.178 | | OOLA::OUELLETTE | Roland -- lost without a towel | Tue Dec 02 1986 13:15 | 6 |
| You still may need an outlet or two on your long glass wall.
Have you considered putting it/them into the ceiling? It might
look a bit unusual, but you could camouflage it with a hanging
plant...
R.
|
290.179 | wiring around windows | RINGO::FINGERHUT | | Tue Dec 02 1986 13:37 | 7 |
| I thought of ceiling outlets. But it's post and beam construction
so the only thing over my head are beams and the upstairs floorboards.
There are 6x6 posts between each window. I might put a surface
mounted outlet box on a couple of the beams down at the floor.
|
290.180 | Wiremold outlets? | REMEDY::KOPEC | Hacks R Us | Tue Dec 02 1986 15:18 | 6 |
| You could try the Wiremold outlets... they only take about 1-1/2"
of height and will certainly satisfy code, etc... (whether you like
the way they LOOK or not is another question...)
...tek
|
290.76 | Give me more! | WFOVX3::BILODEAU | | Fri Jan 30 1987 20:14 | 13 |
| Just started reading this notes file and seems real interesting.
I wanted 300 AMP service when I built my house last year and they
don't have it. But they do have 400 AMP service. I got one price
of $1000.00 extra over 200 AMP service and one of around $500.00.
It's a whole new ball game when you go over 200. Three inch conduit
underground to the house and special shunts for running the meter.
The electric company reads my meter and multiplies the reading by
40. Got 200 APMS for the house. 100 AMPS for the garage which
is about 1100 square feet, and 100 AMPS to spare. The electric
bill is another story...
Gerry (with the compressors and welders humming!)
|
290.564 | Power lines up long driveway | CHAPLN::SULLIVAN | Mark Sullivan | Thu Apr 23 1987 18:03 | 50 |
|
The impending start of construction for my new home is
(hopefully) approaching. One area that I am encountering a few
problems in is the utilities; i.e. Little or no experience, little
or no info, little or no cooperation. So, what to do? ASK THE
EXPERTS IN THE HOME_WORK NOTES CONFERENCE!!
Here's my problem. My house will be constructed on a lot with a
1,200 ft. driveway (GASP!!). The good news is that part of the land
deal included the driveway construction. And, the driveway will be
a shared drive with 3 other lots, two behind me, one in front
(namely, a private road). The bad news is that I am the first one
to build and utilities weren't included in the deal.
There are two options for us (me now!).
1) Run individual lines for each lot (obviously doesn't seem to
make much sense).
2) Run a common trunk for all (with me paying up front and
collecting from the others when they tap on.)
My questions;
1) Anyone have an idea on approximate cost (per foot?, yard?,
hour?) for the installation of electric line. I would prefer to
bury the cable but if the difference in cost is great, I could live
with poles. The electric company (Mass. Electric) is responsible
for bringing power to the edge of the public way (1200 feet away)
and I believe will bring it up to two poles in. If I bury, it will
cost me to dig the trench, plus ????.
2) Can you electrical gurus discuss some of the issues
involved? I.E. cable type and transformers needed to get more than
a trickle of electricity up a 1200 ft. line. Who pays for the
needed transformers? How much? (Assume 200 amp. service to each
lot, first lot 500 ft. from road, 2nd 1200 ft., 3rd - 1600, 4th -
1700)
3) How about phone lines? Same type questions.
I haven't had much luck getting the electric company to send an
engineer out to discuss the situation. They don't want to talk to
you unless you are an electrician (I guess I understand their
reasoning somewhat).
Thanks in advance for the input.
Mark
|
290.565 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | | Thu Apr 23 1987 23:51 | 7 |
| I hope they do things different out there or you are looking at
a small fortune to run it out to your house. Here in Colorado you
buy the poles,ect. It is very common to pay $2000-3000 to get
the service drop to the house.
-j
|
290.567 | They... | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | | Sat Apr 25 1987 00:53 | 8 |
| Out here that is the utility company's job one I'll gladly allow
them to have. I dont like working with that type of voltages.
I watched my neighbor knock down a 2800 volt feeder wire while trimming
his trees. The ground looked like it was jumping. I dident offer
to help......
-j
|
290.568 | Where's the breakpoint? | CHAPLN::SULLIVAN | Mark Sullivan | Tue Apr 28 1987 16:12 | 18 |
|
Thanks for the replies so far...
re .2
Who is the electric company in Boylston? Will they pay
for the cable no matter how far it needs to go? (That
seems to be the difference between companies.)
re .3
I agree. I'll do circuits and wiring in the house, but
want no part of getting the high voltage into it. I'm
just trying to estimate costs and determine procedures.
Mark
|
290.569 | | ZEN::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Wed Apr 29 1987 00:52 | 4 |
| Boylston has a Municipal Light Co. Small, but actually quite a good
outfit. We never lost power all thru Gloria and similar storms.
But you really have to get the the manager on the phone if you want
anything done
|
290.570 | where is base note location of reference? | SUBSYS::FILGATE | | Thu Apr 30 1987 13:02 | 5 |
| Whoops? I replied to the base note, with my comment on Boylston
Electric, *BUT* what is the town/state/country of the base note
reference?
|
290.571 | Well, they've started the road anyway. | CHAPLN::SULLIVAN | Mark Sullivan | Mon May 04 1987 17:23 | 14 |
| The base note is for a house in Bolton MA.
From what I have been able to gather, if I supply the trench, the
electric company will supply the wire. True? And is it the same
for the phone company? Somehow seems that they would put a limit
on the length they would be willing to supply (although I hope I'm
wrong).
If the cable is buried you are required to supply a trench which
is free of large/sharp rocks and has a bed of sand, (6?) inches
deep. This prevents the cable from being cut during frost heaves,
ground movement, etc.. You then cover it with more sand and fill
in the trench.
|
290.821 | Buzzing breaker - sap bleeding from pine | THORBY::MARRA | This thing is real!!! | Mon May 18 1987 14:55 | 23 |
|
I finally got the mantle replaned and edged a few weeks ago, I had just
enough time to stain it and stick it in place before I called the room
complete. I now need to finish it; ie put the polyeurethane on it.
However, since putting it back I used the stove once during a cold
night and noticed that the mantle (a 3 inch chunk of pine) is still
bleeding sap. Since then I can see little spots of sap coming out of
it all over. QUESTION: Does anybody know of anything I can do before I
polyeurethane it or is it ok to finish it the way it is?
Question #2, one day, when using the (radial arm) saw in the garage
we noticed that when the saw was on the breaker for it buzzed loudly.
I never noticed it before because I am usually next to the saw when
I use it (?). Anyway; the wire is 12-2 with three plugs in the
garage. Dows anybody have any suggestions why the breaker would
make so much noise? I need to check to see if any other tool would
cause the same noise - i'll check tonight.
.dave.
|
290.822 | | WELFAR::PGRANSEWICZ | | Mon May 18 1987 19:18 | 9 |
| Question #1:
Where did you get this piece of pine? Doesn't sound like lumber
ready to be used for construction.
Question #2:
Not a clue.
|
290.823 | check rating of breaker | MILVAX::HO | | Mon May 18 1987 21:21 | 8 |
| RE #2. Are you on a 15 or 20 amp line. My Sears radial arm saw
which is supposed to run on regular household current consistently
trips the 15 amp breaker I initially had it plugged into. After
moving it to a 20 amp line the problem diappeared. If you're already
on a 20 amp line, check if there is any other load which might be
putting up to the limit
gene ho
|
290.824 | \ | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Tue May 19 1987 07:57 | 7 |
| You can wash away some of the sap with turpentine. That should get
rid of whats there but you still may have a bleeding problem.
It is almost impossible to find a piece of pine that wont
bleed a little sap.
-j
|
290.825 | | THORBY::MARRA | This thing is real!!! | Tue May 19 1987 20:00 | 10 |
|
re .2 It's a 15 amp breaker with nothing else on the line to load
it. Should I just up it to a 20 amp?
re .1 The builders left it there as the mantle. I didn't get around
to using it for two years.
re .3 I'll have to clean it and polyerethane it and see what happens.
.dave.
|
290.826 | | FROST::SIMON | Blown away in the country...Vermont | Tue May 19 1987 20:51 | 10 |
| re: >re .2 It's a 15 amp breaker with nothing else on the line to load
> it. Should I just up it to a 20 amp?
I think you may be pushing the 15 amp breaker with the radial arm saw.
I kept on tripping one with my saw, so I put in a 20 amper and works
fine.
-gary
|
290.827 | no!!! | BOEHM::SEGER | this space intentionally left blank | Wed May 20 1987 12:26 | 13 |
| Yikes!!!
NEVER (and I am shouting) REPLACE A 15 AMP BREAKER WITH A 20 AMP BREAKER!
That's like putting a penny in a fuse box! The reason there is a 15 amp breaker
there is because there is 14 gauge wire and it can only handle 15 amps. If you
put in a 20 amp breaker you should upgrade the entire circuit to 12 gauge.
Just this past weekend I was helping out a friend who was wiring his cellar and
he sort of did the reverse. He put in 14 gauge wire on a 20 amp circuit! Same
thing. I made him replace all his wire with 12 gauge.
-mark
|
290.828 | Get them illegal breakers out, and soon! | STAR::SWIST | Jim Swist ZKO1-1/D42 381-1264 | Wed May 20 1987 12:44 | 8 |
| re .4, .5
That is a blatant code violation. Also one easy to find by an
insurance inspector going through your house should it burn down.
This could cause pain like you don't wanna see.
Jim
|
290.829 | | VIDEO::DCL | David Larrick | Wed May 20 1987 14:16 | 9 |
| If the wire happens to be #12, and if the outlet (and any other equipment
along the way) happens to be 20A, then your 20A breaker is OK. But this
situation is unlikely.
Don't guess; if you don't KNOW that the whole circuit can take 20A, get
that breaker out of there. Please don't wait.
(Sheesh! Nobody complain about the Code being overly restrictive for
awhile, OK?)
|
290.830 | 20a breaker + 20a plug + 12-2 wire = ok? | THORBY::MARRA | This thing is real!!! | Wed May 20 1987 14:33 | 13 |
|
I understand. For clearification the wire is ***12-2*** (mentioned in
.0) The breaker is 15a and the plugs (I believe) are also 15a.
You (general you) are saying that when I switch to the 20A breaker, I
should also change the plugs to 20a versions as well? Therefore the
entire circuit will be 20a?
If this is the case then that makes a lot of sense. I will be sure to
change everything BEFORE I use the saw again. Thank you very much for
your concern.
.dave.
|
290.831 | | VIDEO::DCL | David Larrick | Wed May 20 1987 14:42 | 9 |
| .0> ...the wire is 12-2 with three plugs in the garage.
If the run from the electrical panel to the garage is long, the circuit is
still only good for 15A even though the cable is 12-gauge. Can somebody
look up in the NEC how long "long" is?
You haven't mentioned the wattage or amperage rating of your saw. For a
continuous load like that, anything much over 12A is pushing it (on a 15A
breaker).
|
290.832 | | CLOVAX::MARES | | Wed May 20 1987 14:45 | 12 |
| re .9
correct!!
A common oversight is to install a 20A breaker, 12-2 wire and 15A
outlets. This situation happened to a good buddy of mine: I installed
the panel, breakers and wiring while he installed the outlets after
I left. He reinstalled the CORRECT outlets after his electrical
inspection.
Randy
|
290.833 | ooopppss | FROST::SIMON | Blown away in the country...Vermont | Wed May 20 1987 15:26 | 7 |
|
Whew....I guess I should have mentioned that I ran a whole new
line ...12 guage wire, 20 amp breaker and plug when my saw was
blowing the 15 amp fuse, not just changed the breaker.
-gary
|
290.834 | | WELFAR::PGRANSEWICZ | | Wed May 20 1987 16:15 | 17 |
| What are the implications of having a 15a plug on a 20a line? I
gather from the conversation, it's not safe. Is 15a the maximum
allowed through the plug? Does the same hold true for switches?
Geez, now I've got to go back and check all of the plugs in the
house.
Anybody know a simple, quick way of determining the gauge of old
cloth covered wiring? Was there some kind of coding that was used?
Or do I just have to get to the end of the wire and check the
thickness? I'll be replacing the 7 sub-panels with a breaker box
soon and want to get the right amperage breakers for each circuit.
Anybody have any suggestions/tips/ideas concerning fuse to breaker
conversion? I've really got a mish-mash of old and new wiring to
work with.
Phil
|
290.836 | why daddy! | BOEHM::SEGER | this space intentionally left blank | Wed May 20 1987 16:23 | 20 |
| This is a good question I too would like to know the answer too. Keep in mind
I'm not asking about what the code says, but rather what the implication is.
For example, if one had a 15 amp outlet they NEVER used, the only part that
actually comes in contact with the circuit is that little bar between the 2
screws. Is part of the problem that THAT can't handle the load?
Second question, assuming that little bar can handle the load, if one never put
anything over 15 amps into that outlet would it be safe?
The thing that always pesters me about codes is that some stuff in them is for
your health and safety while other stuff is crap! For example, the electrical
code gets into details about how far apart staples should be. I can't believe
I'm endangering myself if a staple is off a few inches, but clearly using the
wrong gauge wire IS a big deal.
I guess I'm not one to follow orders well unless I understand the reasoning
behind them (I never would have survived the army).
-mark
|
290.837 | just my $.02 | FROST::SIMON | Blown away in the country...Vermont | Wed May 20 1987 16:42 | 15 |
| My understanding is that if you are only going to have one
outlet on the circuit with a 20 amp breaker then it has to
be a 20 amp outlet. If you are going to have more than one,
you can use 15 amp outlets.
I believe the reasoning on the 20 amp outlet is that if you
had an appliance overloading the 15 amp capacity of the outlet
it would not trip the breaker and the outlet might fry..
If you have another outlet on the circuit it will probably(?)
be drawing some current and should trip the breaker. I don't
really think that last part makes sense, but that is what I
was told by an electrician.
-gary
|
290.838 | Code hasn't changed. 15A is OK. | STAR::SWIST | Jim Swist ZKO1-1/D42 381-1264 | Wed May 20 1987 17:25 | 29 |
| There has been no change in the code. The previous reply (.16)
is correct. The electrical inspector mentioned earlier was wrong
(scary, huh? at least this guy was wrong on the careful side).
This is a real nod to practicality in the code. What it is recognizing
is that there are two kinds of 20a circuits - dedicated (usually
appliances) and shared. The dedicated stuff need outlets at the
full rating since that's the only thing on the line and you could
presumably draw 20A from the one point. Shared 20A lines are used
to support a larger number of outlets and fixtures on a given line
than 15A could, but each individual load is small.
The other factor is that there are very few things you would
practically plug in that take more than 15A. Almost all 110V power
tools are 15A or less - this constraint is observed by the
manufacturers of 110V equipment. Where 15A breakers trip with 15A
loads is usually just because the margin of error is so small (breaker
is weak, tool overloaded, etc ).
Where the code covers it's ass is by stating that in the shared
case, it is illegal to plug something drawing over 15A into a 15A
outlet.
This is special cased in the code. All other amperage lines require
outlets rated at that amperage,.
Jim
|
290.839 | 20A outlet still a good idea here | VIDEO::DCL | David Larrick | Wed May 20 1987 18:21 | 14 |
| Well said, .16 and .17. My recommendation of a 20A outlet to go with the
12-2 cable and 20A breaker was intended for the specific application being
discussed here. Sorry I didn't make clear that it's not a general Code
requirement.
In the application under discussion, the circuit is essentially dedicated
(to the radial arm saw). The fact that there are three outlets is an
implementation detail.
And the existing 15A breaker is buzzing under load. Until somebody tells
me the amperage rating of that saw, I have to assume that it's at or over
15A (continuous load!), so I felt a 20A outlet would be smart. And probably
required, once we find out that amperage rating and apply the percentages
for continuous load.
|
290.840 | amperage rating ~13 | THORBY::MARRA | Your right, I'm making this up | Fri May 29 1987 12:11 | 11 |
|
Well the manual says that it draws about 13 amps. I will try the saw
plugged into a different outlet (the one for the washing machine) and
see if IT (the saw) makes that one buzz. If it too buzzes then it's
the saw, if not, then it's the breaker.
Thanks again for the help... I'll let you know what I find out.
.dave.
|
290.719 | How to read your electric meter | MORMPS::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Thu Jul 09 1987 19:01 | 17 |
| I learned something interesting today - thought I'd pass it on.
I wanted to get an understanding of what some high-current,
long-operation, appliances in my home (central air, fans, etc) cost
per hour to run. So, I shut everything off in my house, went out to
my rotary electric meter, took a base reading (how much rotation in a
minute), and then one-by-one, turned on the appliances and took new
readings. I then subtracted out the base reading, and had electricity
measurements for all the appliances in rev/minute.
Called boston electric, found out that I wanted to talk to the "meter
maintenance" dept, who gave me this neat formula:
Rev/hr * KHfactor = Watts.
Where KHfactor is the number next to the symbol Kh on your meter.
This apparently applies for all rotary meters.
|
290.720 | Somethings Not Right | LDP::BURKHART | | Thu Jul 09 1987 19:17 | 5 |
| If you shut EVERYTHING off in your house and the meter was still
rotating you've got a problem somewere!
Taken literally...
...Dave
|
290.721 | | MORMPS::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Thu Jul 09 1987 21:50 | 6 |
| > If you shut EVERYTHING off in your house and the meter was still
> rotating you've got a problem somewere!
If course it wasn't everything. The electronics in my instant-on TV,
phone answering machine, A/C coil heater, etc - were still running.
That's why I took a base reading
|
290.722 | and the winner is.... | DECSIM::FARMER | | Fri Jul 10 1987 01:43 | 1 |
| so, just out of curiosity, how'd it turn out? any surprises?
|
290.723 | ex | VLNVAX::SUMNER | Yes dear... put it on my list. | Fri Jul 10 1987 04:34 | 9 |
|
I understand that the meter itself uses electricity and therefore
the meter won't be completely stopped until the power to it is
shut off.
p.s. Guess who pays for the power that the meter uses?
Glenn
|
290.724 | who pays for anything? where does money come from anyway? | PSTJTT::TABER | Reliefe is just a NEXT UNSEEN away | Fri Jul 10 1987 12:46 | 11 |
| > p.s. Guess who pays for the power that the meter uses?
One of those heavy philosophical questions. Who pays for the trucks
that the electric company uses? Who pays for the transmission lines? I
guess it's the people who use the electricity.
But if it makes you feel any better, the electric meter noes not add its
own power requirements to your bill, and if you pop the mains on your
house (which come AFTER the meter,) it will stop spinning.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
290.725 | A simpler method | HPSMEG::LUKOWSKI | I need an 'AUX' for my stereo | Fri Jul 10 1987 13:27 | 21 |
| Why not read the ratings of the appliances themselves and go from
there? AMPS*VOLTS=WATTS Suppose you have an appliance that consumes
7.5 Amps, and runs at 115 Volts (if this is the voltage at your house)
then using the above formula, the Watts that it consumes is 862.5.
Let's make another assumption that your cost/Kwh is $.08. We then
divide 862.5 by 1000 (1kw) and arrive at .8625. Now multiply this
by the cost/Kwh and it costs you $.069/hour to run or 6.9 cents/hour.
Note that appliance ratings are max consumption. i.e. if you have
an Air conditioner running on low, it will consume a little less
power because the difference here will be the fan consuming a little
less power.
In summary:
AMPS*VOLTS=Watts
7.5 * 115 =862.5 Watts consumed in 1 hour
.8625*.08 =.069 # of Kw * cost/Kwh = cost/hr to run
-Jim
|
290.726 | | ZEN::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Fri Jul 10 1987 14:24 | 15 |
| > Why not read the ratings of the appliances themselves and go from
> there? AMPS*VOLTS=WATTS
not everything is marked. Or some markings are 'maximum' ratings,
rather than real numbers.
> Note that appliance ratings are max consumption. i.e. if you have
> an Air conditioner running on low, it will consume a little less
> power because the difference here will be the fan consuming a little
> less power.
Depends - my A/C fan is slowed down by powering fewer windings - thus
making it run more inefficiently for the same electricity cost.
|
290.727 | Don't forget reactance... | CHFV03::SCHULDT | Larry Schuldt - WA9TAH | Fri Jul 10 1987 14:37 | 8 |
| In the world of appliances, AMPS * VOLTS = VOLT-AMPS (VA)!
AMPS * VOLTS = WATTS only for a resistive load (toasters, electric
fry pans, electric range, etc. If it has a motor on it, you must
use AMPS * VOLTS * POWER FACTOR = WATTS.
By the way, do you pay for watts or volt-amps on your electric
bill? Volt-amps will be a bigger number than actual watts, so I
expect that that's what you'll end up paying for.....
|
290.728 | kwh = vah ? | MAPLE::HANNAH | | Fri Jul 10 1987 14:56 | 9 |
|
I believe our "watt" meters measure Volts x Amps x Time. (If I'm
wrong, somebody correct me)
Therefore
we are paying for VA's and not watts. The fraction of volt amps
which is not not actual disipated power (watts) is returned to the
power line. Most homes have a very high power factor, while industries
have more to worry about with inductance of motors and capacitance
of computer systems.
|
290.729 | | HPSMEG::LUKOWSKI | I need an 'AUX' for my stereo | Fri Jul 10 1987 16:00 | 22 |
| Re: .7
You are right. I didn't mean to imply that all appliances have
the power consumption ratings on them. When they don't, I usually
find this info somewhere in the manual(s) that come with the appliance.
I didn't realize that an A/C would consume the same power at
different speeds.
Re: .8
Please explain "POWER FACTOR". I was under the impression that
power factor was an efficiency rating of a motor. i.e. how much
power consumed was actually converted to usable energy and not dissipated
as heat.
-Jim
Disclaimer: (I'd better get this in here fast :^) ) I have no
electrical background...just enough info to make me
dangerous.
|
290.730 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Fri Jul 10 1987 17:00 | 38 |
| I'm pretty vague on power factor, but here goes (I'm sure somebody
else will do a better job!). I'm sure this is wildly inaccurate,
technically, but it may give you a feel for what the basic concept is.
Electricity is "used up" when it gets converted to heat. This
happens when current goes through a resistor, which can be a
lightbulb or something similar. This is a power factor of 1.
Electricity happens to have the property of creating a magnetic
field when it flows through a conductor. The magentic field
produces a force, and this force can be harnessed (in the form
of an electric motor) to do work. HOWEVER, there is not much
resistance loss in an electric motor, so the electricity doesn't
get "used up". Imagine the electricity flowing through the
wire from the generator at the power company and coming to the
electric motor. At that point "something" makes it hard for the
electricity to flow, so the generator has to generate more power
(what it's doing is driving the motor), but in the absence of
resistance no electricity is "used" to do this. In theory, with
a motor with 0 resistance (0 power factor) you could run it for
nothing, because the electric meter would show no power used.
Naturally, the power companies are not too enthusiastic about
this prospect, so for customers with high inductive loads
(factories, etc.) they apply a correction factor based on the
power factor of the customer's use. There are meters available
that measure the power factor, so I assume the electric company
checks a customer's factory while it's operating to see what a
"typical" power factor is for that customer, and uses that number
to correct the bill. Probably these days it's all integrated
together automatically.
It's really a bunch of hand-waving to compensate for the fact that
normal watt-hour electric meters don't measure certain kinds of
electric usage. The power really is used, it's just in a form
not recorded by the meter.
Or, at least that's my interpretation of things. Anybody else want
to have a go at it?
|
290.731 | Meter still moves with no power | SPCTRM::MAJORS | Ward, ease up on the Beaver | Fri Jul 10 1987 17:45 | 11 |
| In the Spring of 85 we had a late snow storm that knocked out the
power in our neighborhood for a few days. However, while shoveling
out near the meter, I happened to notice that it was moving (ever
so slowly - but moving at a regular rate!!!). My thought was that
even though the house had no power, and the power lines were down,
maybe there was residual current still in our section of the power
grid. Obviously, that was an incorrect assumption on my pea-sized
brain. For all you EE's out there, what was causing my meter to
rotate even though I knew the lines were down??
|
290.732 | Watt did you say? | TALLIS::SAMARAS | Advanced Vax Engineering LTN | Fri Jul 10 1987 18:10 | 50 |
| This is a little long winded, but I hope it clears up some confusion...
In simple terms, the wattmeter on your house (or anywhere) can only
measure REAL power, that is (VOLTS x AMPS). Since the voltage and current
entering your house is alternating current, it's possible to shift the
voltage and current out of phase from each other. The biggest cause of
this is "inductive loads" or in english "electric motors". If the voltage
and current are shifted out of phase, you will get a different answer
if you multiply them together to get power. This phase shifting due to an
inductive load causes wattmeters to read less power. Just because the
voltage or current is phase shifted doesn't mean any LESS power is being
used, it just means it's difficult to measure with a simple wattmeter.
The amount of phase shift that occurs between the voltage and current is
expressed as the number of degrees shifted in one AC cycle. The cosine of
these degrees is the power factor. Without getting into complicated math,
the average power used is actually:
AVERAGE POWER = (VOLTS x AMPS) x COS(phase shift)
Don't get scared, this isn't that bad. Let's take an example. An electric
heater being resistive causes no phase shift (0 degrees). So assuming 110
volts, and 10 Amps our equation gives us:
AVERAGE POWER = (110 x 10) x COS(0)
Since the COS(0) is 1, the AVERAGE POWER is 1100 Watts.
Now say we have an air conditioner with an inductive motor causing a phase
shift of 20 degrees. Let's assume 110 Volts, and 10 Amps. Now we have:
AVERAGE POWER = (110 x 10) x COS(20)
The COS(20) is about 0.94, so the average power appears to be 110 x 10 x 0.94
which is 1034 Watts.
The difference between 1100 Watts and 1034 Watts is called "reactive
power" and is not easily measured. Usually, power companies get upset if
your power factor gets below 0.7 (about 45 degrees phase shift). The power
company will impose fines until the power factor is corrected.
In a residence, it's almost impossible to get a "bad" power factor since
the amount of inductive loading is small. In an industrial plant where
90% of the electric usage may be connected to big inductive motors,
watching the power factor is important.
Correcting power factor is accomplished by connecting capacitors accross
the power line near the inductive load. Capacitors cause a phase shift in
the opposite direction of inductors.
|
290.733 | too good to be true | ZEN::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Fri Jul 10 1987 22:40 | 4 |
| this reminds me of something i saw in a 'mister wizard' type
publication - said you could cut your electric bill by putting
components (capacitors, inductors?) across an electrical outlet in
your house
|
290.734 | KVA or KVAR or ... | TALLIS::SAMARAS | Advanced Vax Engineering LTN | Mon Jul 13 1987 13:11 | 14 |
| I think it would be difficult to make any difference in you electric bill
(in a home), by adding "gizmos" on the line.
BTW, in factories low power factors (lot's of motors), cause higher
currents to be drawn through the line without any increase in power. This
is the major reason power companies get upset with low power factors.
They would have to run larger wire to carry the higher currents for the
same number of Watts. The reason for this gets a little more hairy than
REPLY .13, but it's true. If anyone REALLY wants to know why, I may be
persuaded to spend a few minutes typing it in...
As in most things in life, you can't get something for nuthin'.
...bill
|
290.735 | Light fixtures and power factors | MAY11::WARCHOL | | Mon Jul 13 1987 13:53 | 14 |
| Another outcome of all this is the addition of power wasting resistors
inside of flourescent light fixtures. Ever wonder why the ballast
units inside get so hot? A flourescent bulb can be made to light
soley on the reactive power previously described. Resistive losses
were added to the ballast units so that something would show up
on the power meters.
I know of a frat house at an engineering college that was occupied
by electrical engineering students. In order to save a few bucks
on their electric bill they redesigned a bunch of flourescent fixtures
and used them throughout the house. The place was lit up like a
Christmas tree but the meter hardly moved.
Nick
|
290.736 | from the text | MAPLE::HANNAH | | Mon Jul 13 1987 13:59 | 19 |
|
Since I'm no jouralist let me take some quotes from one of my text
books concerning power factor:
..the concepts of apparent power and power factor can be traced
to the power industry, where large amounts of electrical energy
must be transfered from one place to another,the efficiency with
which this transfer is effected is related directly to the cost
of the energy, which is eventually paid by the consumer. A customer
who provides a load which results in a relatively poor transmission
efficiency must pay a greater price for each kilo-watt-hour (KWH).
(also the power company has to invest capital to generate the reactive
power)
... average power = P = VIcos theta ( theta = phase angle by which
the voltage leads the current and can be negative) V and I are rms
values.
... If our applied voltage and current had been dc quanities the
|
290.737 | Clears things up for me! | WELFAR::PGRANSEWICZ | | Mon Jul 13 1987 17:01 | 7 |
| RE: .17
Ahhhh, ya. Very *"interesting"*... Now I understand completely!!!
All in all, I can think of hundreds of things I'd rather read than
my electric meter.
|
290.738 | A motor wiring question | HPSMEG::LUKOWSKI | I need an 'AUX' for my stereo | Tue Jul 14 1987 14:27 | 8 |
| I didn't realize we had 'motor'heads in this conference. :^)
I have a simple question regarding the wiring of a motor I found.
It has four wires to it: one black, one white, and two reds. What
are the red wires? I don't know if this motor is any good but if
it isn't, I can always bring it back (I found it at the dump).
-Jim
|
290.739 | Capacitor? | NETCOM::HARRIS | Mark Jay Harris, Term Srvr Mktg Mgr | Tue Jul 14 1987 15:16 | 15 |
| Motors with 4 wires *TEND* to be of two types (depending on where
the wires come out of the case:
1. 1 speed which uses two for AC, and 2 for AC capacitor
2. Multi-speed/Bi-directional - different combinations of the
wires and then sometimes crossing them produces
different speeds
I would take a shot that based upon the colors you mentioned, it
is like #1
Mark
|
290.740 | What's the capacitor for? | POP::SUNG | Dept. of Redundancy Dept. | Tue Jul 14 1987 15:44 | 5 |
| While we're on the topic of motors, what makes motors start
moving from a dead start? What does it mean if a motor (which
used to start itself) needs a little push to get it spinning?
-al
|
290.741 | | MILT::JACKSON | Bill Jackson DOESN'T take American Express | Tue Jul 14 1987 16:18 | 18 |
| depends on what kind of motor.
If it's DC, the current will flow through the brushes to the commutator
and cause a magnetic field in the coil connected at the time. (each
section on the commutator is part of a pair (other directly opposite)
that has a wire loop connected to it) This magnetic field will
cause the motor to turn
If it's an Induction motor, the current flows through the field
(AC though) and causes a push from the field on the constant armature
(some don't even have windings if I remember correctly)
But don't take this from me, I almost failed motors and generators
when I was in EE school! (what do motors have to do with computers?)
-bill
|
290.742 | You answered your own question | JON::MORONEY | Welcome to the Machine | Tue Jul 14 1987 22:41 | 21 |
| re .21:
The capacitor's purpose is to start the motor.
AC motors (single phase, like common household motors) cannot start themselves.
This is because the magnetic field needs to "shift" when the motor isn't turning
to get it to spin. If the motor won't start itself but will run once given a
push, the starting circuit is bad.
There are several tricks to produce the shifting AC field needed to start the
motor. One is a starting capacitor and an additional winding. The capacitor
produces a phase shift in the current through the winding to give the motor the
starting "push" it needs. Other methods are high-inductance starting windings
that use the winding's inductance that produce the phase shift, shaded poles
etc.
re electric meters:
I believe electric meters take into account power factor, but I may be wrong.
-Mike
|
290.743 | Summertime Power Factor | CHFV03::SCHULDT | Larry Schuldt - WA9TAH | Wed Jul 15 1987 14:18 | 8 |
| re .8, .9, .11, .13, etc.
It seems to me that a summertime residential load would be fairly
reactive. At my place, we use less resistive devices (lights, oven,
range, toaster) and more reactive devices (A/C, dehumidifier,
refrigerator), so that during the day our power use must have some
fairly significant reactive component. Does anyone know for sure whether
we're billed for watts or VA?
|
290.744 | Watt we pay for | VIDEO::GOODRICH | Gerry Goodrich | Wed Jul 15 1987 16:46 | 21 |
| re .24
> Does anyone know for sure whether
> we're billed for watts or VA?
Electric company power meters measure watts, Electric companies
like low power factors (Watts almost equal V*A) since they
they don't like paying for large guage wires that carry amps
to a user that can't charged to the user.
Residential customers already have heavy guage distribution
to handle peak cooking and water heating loads (sometimes
house heating). These heavy peak loads are resistive.
The major peak load from most industries results from the
operation of motors, in this situation the wire guage must
be determined by V*A instead of watts.
gerry
|
290.745 | | MILT::JACKSON | Bill Jackson DOESN'T take American Express | Thu Jul 16 1987 12:09 | 10 |
| I think that most electric companies require you to have a 'good'
power factor. If you are an industrial customer, they monitor this
and charge accordingly.
As .-1 said, they don't like sending lots of juice and not having
you pay for it (they measure watts, so if the PF is not close to
1, they get bummed out)
-bill
|
290.746 | Have you been notified? | HPSMEG::LUKOWSKI | I need an 'AUX' for my stereo | Thu Jul 16 1987 13:52 | 16 |
| I received an interesting letter/notice from Shrewsbury electric
yesterday. It essentially said that if there's a heat wave in August,
they (they meaning esentially all New England power companies) may
reduce voltages and possibly interrupt power service (to prevent
total collapse) during peak demand times. The letter mentioned
that there are less power generating stations available than normal
for this time of year and that that are part of some type of 'pool'
that shares resources in the event of a major hardship. I really should
have brought the letter in so I could be more accurate. I was just
wondering if any of you received a notice like this from your electric
company. I certainly appreciated being notified of the possibility
of a brown-out. I don't think that Mass Electric would bother but
I am curious.
-Jim
|
290.747 | | TALLIS::SAMARAS | Advanced Vax Engineering LTN | Thu Jul 16 1987 13:59 | 11 |
| I heard on the news this morning that the Maine Yankee nuclear plant was
shutdown last night due to turbine problems. There is great concern that
there will be major power problems this summer without this capacity.
On the other hand, this might all be a ploy to get the public rooting to
get Seabrook running.
..bill
|
290.748 | | WELFAR::PGRANSEWICZ | | Thu Jul 16 1987 15:13 | 15 |
|
RE: .28
> On the other hand, this might all be a ploy to get the public rooting to
> get Seabrook running.
What's that, 3 nuclear plants down now in this region. You can
bet on power problems! Everybody wants the juice but nobody wants
the power plants. Well, off to Spag's to get the Coleman stove
and lantern...
This brings up an interesting side topic! Has anybody out there
hooked up one of those portable generators to supply their house
with electricity in the event of a blackout?
|
290.749 | watts the matta you | MAPLE::HANNAH | | Thu Jul 16 1987 15:14 | 8 |
| re .25
power factor = watts/volt*amps
a high power factor is closer to unity, not low as you
stated. (just thought i'd clarify)
|
290.750 | generators? | REGENT::GETTYS | Bob Gettys N1BRM | Thu Jul 16 1987 17:09 | 21 |
| Hooking up a generator to the house in case of blackout
isn't too hard. To do it right you need a transfer switch so
that there is NO possibility of try to back feed the power
company (you couldn't anyway because of the load!).
To do it for a temp solution to something, pull the main
fuses and put them somewhere else (so that only you can put the
main power back on) [with a breaker, tape it in the off position
and hang a DO NOT TOUCH sign on it]. Now you can back feed the
house through one of the circuits (pick one comparable to your
generators output). This will only allow one half of the house
to be run at a time (within the limits of the generator and the
circuit you are back feeding) with a 110 V generator as most of
the small ones are. (Your house is divided in half across the
220 input. You can only feed half of this at any given time
without creating a potentialy very dangerous situation.)
If you have a 220 generator, it is big enough that you
really should set it up to do it right!
/s/ Bob
|
290.751 | Must of had a brain brown-out | VIDEO::GOODRICH | Gerry Goodrich | Thu Jul 16 1987 17:55 | 10 |
| re .30
> a high power factor is closer to unity, not low as you
> stated. (just thought i'd clarify)
Yup, the only thing low power factors are good for is keeping
the ice off of the power lines.
- gerry
|
290.752 | | 3D::BOOTH | Stephen Booth | Thu Jul 16 1987 18:51 | 10 |
|
To hook up a genertor is not hard. Most generators like a HONDA
are very easy. They give you a plug that you run from the genertor
and then just plug into an outlet and your on your way. You don't
have to pull fuses or do anything else except start it up and plug
it in.
-Steve-
|
290.753 | .-1 has been VERY VERY LUCKY!!!!!!!! | REGENT::GETTYS | Bob Gettys N1BRM | Fri Jul 17 1987 11:53 | 28 |
| >< Note 1309.33 by 3D::BOOTH "Stephen Booth" >
>
>
>
>
> To hook up a genertor is not hard. Most generators like a HONDA
> are very easy. They give you a plug that you run from the genertor
> and then just plug into an outlet and your on your way. You don't
> have to pull fuses or do anything else except start it up and plug
> it in.
>
> -Steve-
>
NO! A thousand times NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You MUST, absolutely MUST, disconnect your house from
the main incoming lines!!!!!!!!! For two reasons, one, to
protect the people that are working on the downed power lines
(if that was the cause of your outage) and two, so that you
aren't trying to run the entire neighborhood (or more) and
grossly exceeding the capability of your generator.
/s/ Bob
|
290.754 | RrrrRrrrRrrrRrrr KABOOM! | USMRM2::CBUSKY | | Fri Jul 17 1987 13:23 | 8 |
| Another reason you MUST pull the main fuse...
When the power comes back on and your generator is still running....
LOOK OUT! I'm not sure exactly what would happen, but hopefully all
you'll do is blow a fuse, but you could seriously damage your
generator.
Charly
|
290.755 | !!! NO !!! | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Fri Jul 17 1987 14:47 | 9 |
| Re: .33
NN NN OOOOOO !!
NNNN NN OO OO !!
NN NN NN OO OO !! FOR ALL THE REASONS GIVEN IN
NN NN NN OO OO !! .34 AND .35!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
NN NNNN OO OO
NN NN OOOOOO !!
|
290.756 | In Addition | LDP::BURKHART | | Fri Jul 17 1987 15:36 | 7 |
| If your generator is not big enough to supply the whole hose,
you may also want to shut off several of the individual circuit
brakers, so that someone doesn't turn on the A/C in the bedroom
and blow the generator (or its fuse). Just leave the circuits on
that you need to keep power to.
...Dave
|
290.757 | important question | REGENT::MERRILL | Glyph, and the world glyphs with u,... | Fri Jul 17 1987 17:23 | 9 |
| re: .12 - meter moving but lines are down - two choices:
you have something that is "generating electricity" like a blower
motor that is being turned by drafts (do you have forced hot air?)
or the lines are NOT down completely: 220 volt service uses three
wires, any two of which could put (deadly) juice into your house!
If your meter is turning, switch off the main breaker fast!
rmm
|
290.758 | Does my meter read differently? | REGENT::MERRILL | Glyph, and the world glyphs with u,... | Mon Jul 20 1987 14:01 | 0 |
290.759 | ask for meter maintenance | MORMPS::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Mon Jul 20 1987 15:38 | 2 |
| Call your local electric Co. - Ask (insist) for the METER MAINTENANCE
dept. ask them
|
290.760 | ah ah! | REGENT::MERRILL | Glyph, and the world glyphs with u,... | Tue Jul 21 1987 13:57 | 12 |
| re: .40 - I did, thank you, and got the following good info:
Rr :== Revs per rotatation (rotations per unit gearing on dial)
K. :== old notation for Kh*10
so K.12 ==> 1.2 wh/rev. (watthours per turn)
CL200 :== CLass 200 (meter can take 200 amps maxiumn)
240V 3W :=== 240 volts (you knew that!) and three Wire!
rmm
|
290.761 | | WELFAR::PGRANSEWICZ | | Tue Jul 21 1987 19:39 | 13 |
|
RE: .41
> CL200 :== CLass 200 (meter can take 200 amps maxiumn)
I'm trying to figure out what service I have at the house. Called
the electric company (local) and they did know! The maze of fuse
boxes in the basement is no clue either. Is it marked on all meters
like this? Anything else I should look for? I want to get rid
of all those fuse boxes with breakers but want to know what I have
now.
Phil
|
290.762 | | USMRM2::CBUSKY | | Tue Jul 21 1987 20:35 | 18 |
| Don't worry too much about what is coming in now. Upgrade your fuse or
breaker box to what YOU WANT, either 100 or 200 amp service and ask
the power company to upgrade the line to match it.
This usually requires the services of a licensed electrician,
especially if you have to replace the meter box and lead in wire. In
normal circumstances around here (above ground wiring) you are
responsible for all of the hardware from the weather head on in. The
power company plugs THEIR meter into YOUR meter box. Don't forget that
a 60 amp meter plugs into 60 meter box, 100 amp meter plugs into 100
amp meter box and so on. Want to upgrade your service, you probably
will have to replace the meter box to do it.
Question: If you have 60 amp meter and 100 breaker box and you start
drawing 61-100 amps... what happens? Do the meters have a built-in
fuse to protect them?
Charly
|
290.763 | | 3D::BOOTH | Stephen Booth | Mon Jul 27 1987 12:41 | 12 |
|
I just had my house upgraded from 60 amp service to 200 amp
service to replace 5 fuse boxes. It cost me $800 to have the job
done by John Beike of Leominster who did an excellent job. When
everything was ready my old meter was taken out and I was wired
without a meter for about 5 days until the electric company installed
a 200 amp meter. During that 5 days I got free electric and believe
me I took advantage !!!
-Steve-
|
290.764 | Check the guage of the service wires | VIDEO::GOODRICH | Gerry Goodrich | Mon Jul 27 1987 14:06 | 22 |
| re .42
> I'm trying to figure out what service I have at the house.
Look at the guage wire (shoud be marked someplace) running to &
from the meter. This sets the safe limit. In older services it
was common (and still legal) to have up to 4 disconnects instead
of a single main breaker or fuse. Often you would see cartridge
fuse holders marked "main lighting, range, dryer ...) A 100 A
service might have a 60 A main, 50 A range, 30 A dryer and 30 A
water heater. Often one of the cartridges was used to subfeed
other fuse/breaker boxes. The fact that the total is greater
than the service is neither unusual or dangerous. The code
book gives methods of determining the min safe service.
100 A is generally fine if you don't have electric heat.
If you have a gas range, gas water heater and gas dryer 60
A is probably safe.
- gerry
|
290.765 | electrician recommendation? | Q::ROSENBAUM | Rich Rosenbaum;mail->Boehm::Rosenbaum | Mon Jul 27 1987 20:32 | 3 |
| Any recommendations for an electrician in the Pepperell, Mass. area
with experience hooking up emergency generators?
|
290.766 | | 3D::BOOTH | Stephen Booth | Mon Jul 27 1987 20:47 | 8 |
|
John Beike in Leominster. Not listed in Yellow Pages but in
residential listing and local news paper.
-Steve-
|
290.181 | Building Inspections | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Thu Sep 03 1987 15:06 | 16 |
|
Some notes on the inspections for my addition:
1. I added a subpanel to the electrical system, (thanks to the
replies to this note) and the wiring inspector never even
went in the basement. (I wonder if I did it right).
2. For the final plumbing inspection the inspector asked me if
I'd be home during the day and I said No, so he said "tape the
permit to your door and I'll sign it, I don't need to see inside".
3. The inspection of my foundation prior to backfilling was done
over the phone. The inspector asked if I broke off the rods,
and cemented over them. He never saw it.
|
290.182 | foundation inspection question | CAMLOT::JANIAK | | Thu Sep 03 1987 19:09 | 7 |
| re .57 What do you mean by 'break off the rods and cement over
them" in reference to the foundation inspection? Are you referring
to the metal tie rods which hold the forms together and then protrude
from the walls once the forms are removed? And is this only for
inside walls? ie. does not apply to garage walls.
Stan
|
290.183 | | 3D::BOOTH | Stephen Booth | Thu Sep 03 1987 19:13 | 8 |
| re .57
Do you live in Mass and if so did you get a plumbing permit
as it is illegal for anyone other than a licenced plumber to do
ANY plumbing at all.
-Steve-
|
290.184 | Not even in mass | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Thu Sep 03 1987 23:07 | 8 |
| re.59
that would be correct if you added the words "for hire".
You can do your *own* plumbing in any state in the usa legaly
its doing it for hire that falls under the rule you are thinking
of.
-j
|
290.185 | | 3D::BOOTH | Stephen Booth | Fri Sep 04 1987 12:13 | 11 |
| re .60
WRONG!WRONG!WRONG
I saw the law in writting and you can call the plumbing inspector
in Lunenburg if you like. This is not Lunenburg law but STATE LAW.
If you know of a town that lets you in Mass please give me the
town as I would very much like to know.
-Steve-
|
290.186 | plumbing | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Fri Sep 04 1987 13:09 | 26 |
| <<< JOET::SYS$SYSROOT:[NOTES$LIBRARY]HOME_WORK.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Better Living Through DIY >-
================================================================================
Note 450.58 adding an electrical panel 58 of 61
CAMLOT::JANIAK 7 lines 3-SEP-1987 15:09
-< foundation inspection question >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> What do you mean by 'break off the rods and cement over
> them" in reference to the foundation inspection? Are you referring
> to the metal tie rods which hold the forms together and then protrude
> from the walls once the forms are removed? And is this only for
> inside walls? ie. does not apply to garage walls.
Yes. And it applies to both sides of any walls which are below
grade.
> Do you live in Mass and if so did you get a plumbing permit
> as it is illegal for anyone other than a licenced plumber to do
> ANY plumbing at all.
Yes, a licensed plumber did my plumbing. I realize you can't take
out a plumbing permit to do work yourself. If it's illegal to do
plumbing yourself without a permit, what's the fine?
|
290.187 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Fri Sep 04 1987 19:26 | 4 |
| re: .60
As I understand it, by STATE LAW in Mass. you can't legally even
change a faucet washer youself; a plumber is supposed to do it.
|
290.188 | Well thats a stupid law!\ | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Fri Sep 04 1987 23:07 | 8 |
| You guys have some of the stupidest laws i have ever incountered
I'm glad I live in Colorado where the laws are made with a slight
amount of common sense.
What *IS* legal in mass? From what I have read in this and other
notes files I wouldent guess much.
-j
|
290.189 | MA -- a new law every 60 sec | CASSAN::JOHNSON | Peter c/o Marlboro Computer Co. | Mon Sep 07 1987 13:11 | 11 |
|
Very little is legal in Mass since the state legislature is always on a
crusade to pass laws to "protect" their citizens from their own stupidity.
From the rate at which they pass these laws I would suspect they consider
the average IQ of a Mass resident to be about 10. Everytime some person
gets hurt etc. off they go to pass another law.
Having lived in several other states I can say there is greater sanity
elsewhere.
-pj
|
290.190 | License, what license? | STAR::GOLDSTEIN | Andy Goldstein, VMS Development | Tue Sep 08 1987 01:13 | 4 |
| Hmmm... If only licensed plumbers are supposed to do plumbing, there
must be an amazingly high per capita rate of licensed plumbers in Mass.,
judging from the brisk business places like Somerville Lumber, Spags,
and lots of others do in plumbing supplies. (:^})
|
290.191 | | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Tue Sep 08 1987 11:49 | 16 |
| > Hmmm... If only licensed plumbers are supposed to do plumbing, there
> must be an amazingly high per capita rate of licensed plumbers in Mass.,
> judging from the brisk business places like Somerville Lumber, Spags,
> and lots of others do in plumbing supplies. (:^})
Hmm. There's a loophole there. Better call your state representative right
away and have him pass a law requiring your to show your plumbing license
before purchasing any plumbing supplies. And, of course, to make it illegal to
carry any contraband plumbing supplies over state lines...
PLEASE! No one listen to me! I'm only kidding!
What scares me is there are some jackasses in Mass who really would do such a
thing.
Paul
|
290.192 | plumbers | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Tue Sep 08 1987 14:24 | 8 |
| Don't worry...... There already are plumbing supply houses who
will only sell to licensed plumbers.
The plumbers union is much stronger than the elecrical workers
union. They've put more effort into lobbying state government.
That's why you can't change a faucet washer but you can install
an electrical panel.
|
290.193 | LEGAL PRICE PROTECTION | ARMORY::LEMOINEJ | ANOTHER VIEW | Tue Sep 08 1987 15:17 | 8 |
| The worst part of the Mass. plumbing laws is trying to get a
plumber in an emergency, or one who won't charge an outragous price
to do something any dummy can do............. Come on who really
would pay a plumber what they want for a leaky faucet!!!
john
|
290.194 | You might get wet... | 3D::WHITE | Randy White, Doncha love old homes... | Wed Sep 09 1987 15:07 | 18 |
|
I always wondered why in Massachusetts it was illegal to do something
that might get you wet, i.e. plumbing, yet it's ok to do something
that might get you killed, i.e. electrical work. Must be those people
out there protecting us again. :^}
Honestly, I was told by some town official, don't remember who, that
the reason for plumbing restrictions in Mass was the board of health
It seems the board of health was concerned that some homeowner might
possibly find a way of connecting their waste lines into the supply
lines ??? I felt better after that ?-)
Then the general philosophy among the old townies is, you do what
you know how to do, you learn the rest on the job and you pull a
permit if you think someone official might notice.
Is it illegal if you don't get caught? I guess I'll leave that for
the philosophy noters.
|
290.195 | plumbing | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Sep 09 1987 15:21 | 13 |
| > Is it illegal if you don't get caught? I guess I'll leave that for
> the philosophy noters.
According to the Townsend MA building inspector of 5 years ago (not
any more), if you do work that's not to code, and sell the house,
you can be held responsible later if there are any problems. Also,
he said that if he approved work which wasn't to code, he can be
sued for it.
BTW: I don't believe the bit about requiring a licensed plumber
so you don't hook your waste line up to your water intake. (I guess
you don't either).
I still think it's because the plumber's union lobbied for it.
|
290.196 | | ULTRA::PRIBORSKY | Tony Priborsky | Wed Sep 09 1987 15:49 | 7 |
| Re: Why you can't do plumbing yourself:
The building inspector in Gardner told me that they really don't
care about water lines. What they are really concerned about are
wastewater lines. The primary concern being that they are properly
vented and trapped. Improper installation of wastewater lines
can result in a buildup of sewer gas.
|
290.197 | Plumbing | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Sep 09 1987 15:58 | 21 |
| > Re: Why you can't do plumbing yourself:
>
> The building inspector in Gardner told me that they really don't
> care about water lines. What they are really concerned about are
> wastewater lines. The primary concern being that they are properly
> vented and trapped. Improper installation of wastewater lines
> can result in a buildup of sewer gas.
This makes no sense. Aren't building inspectors concerned
that the occupants don't get electricuted? Or that someone walking
on the second floor doesn't fall through to the basement?
Aren't they concerned that a second floor deck has a railing that
children can't fall through?
If so, why don't they require a licensed electrician to wire a house,
or a Master Carpenter to build it?
The fact that they're concerned about drains being vented properly
isn't the reason why a licensed plumber has to do the plumbing.
That's what inspections are for.
|
290.198 | cross connecting potable and waste lines | AMULET::FARRINGTON | statistically anomalous | Wed Sep 09 1987 16:22 | 6 |
| In Shirley, MA, one of the town inspectors or other such 'official'
commented that the issue revolved around an amateur (me) connecting
(or misconnecting) the waste and city water lines. Seems the Health
Board people take a dim view of such shenanigans.
Dwight
|
290.199 | Collect call for Typhoid Mary | ARGUS::CURTIS | Dick 'Aristotle' Curtis | Wed Sep 09 1987 16:23 | 9 |
| I've heard it claimed that (part of) the reason for requiring a
licenced plumber is the possibility that you could do some work
on a sink, say, that allowed your wastewater to get sucked back
into the lines, and then out into the street, and suddenly you've
got the possibility of a neighborhood whose water mains are full
of contaminated water, and maybe cholera.
Dick
|
290.200 | Insecticides too. | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Sep 09 1987 16:44 | 5 |
| It's not just wastewater. There's also those attachments that
you put on your garden hose to mix insect/herbicides to the
water as it's sprayed. That can backflow thru your pipes to
the watermain.
|
290.201 | try and prove it :-} | 3D::WHITE | Randy White, Doncha love old homes... | Wed Sep 09 1987 17:11 | 24 |
| re:450.71
> According to the Townsend MA building inspector of 5 years ago (not
> any more), if you do work that's not to code, and sell the house,
> you can be held responsible later if there are any problems. Also,
> he said that if he approved work which wasn't to code, he can be
> sued for it.
I'd love to see them prove something like this :-} ditto for the
inspector, the worst that happens to the inspector is he gets
po'd and resigns, happened in my town about 3 years ago, he had
approved eight family condo units where there were supposed to
be six family units! Sounds a little funny how an *accident*
like that might have happened!
re: believing waste line to city pipes, I don't know what to
believe, I guess I can understand the concern; I've seen people
do some pretty scary things. Though again that's where the
inspection should take care of things. After all if people
are allowed to do their own work they might get it inspected,
since they legally can't they might do the work anyway and *won't*
get it inspected. I guess we do what we feel comfortable with.
Later Randy
|
290.202 | It's a simple question of risks | XANADU::SCHNEIDER | Dennis Schneider | Wed Sep 09 1987 19:32 | 22 |
| While you could argue easily that the risks are nonexistant, the basic
reasoning behind the difference is:
There is basically nothing you can do with the electrical wiring in your
home that can threaten your community without being easily noticed. Sure,
you could go out and buy a kilovolt generator and wire it in, but all you'd
do is blow the insulation off the cable twixt your house and mains - plus
there'd be electrical alarms all over the place, filter capacitors and
transformers blown away - but it's not likely you could poison the community.
Now, with the water supply, things are different. Suppose the pumps which
pressurize the water supply to your home (in most places gravity ain't how
it's done) were to stop. People who lived higher that their source of water
would find that water was siphoning out of their plumbing and into the public
water supply. If something had been done which permitted wastewater to be
in contact with the supply, untreated sewage would be sucked into the drinking
water supply. If the sewage were hazardous, when the pumps were restored
hazardous chemicals would be pumped all over town. With the pumps active,
there's high pressure pushing whatever you have in your house that touches
the water supply away from the mains - but leaching can still occur.
Dennis
|
290.203 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Wed Sep 09 1987 22:44 | 19 |
|
The concern is a reasonable one but I have a difficult time with
any law that assumes the entire population of a state to be incapible
of thought processes. The more sensible law would be one that required
all plumbing be inspected with written exceptions like leaky
faucet,ect. I have an even harder time beliving that replacing
a faulty washer could poison the entire town.
Having worked for the local water department prior to dec I know
that backflow restrictors are placed throughout the water system
to prevent contamination from such events as broken pipes and ect.
These would limit any contamination to a small area such as 1 or
2 blocks. Here backflow is controlled at each home at the street
valve and in some cases inside the home also. Seems like a pretty
shakey reason to pass a law. Sounds like the union is too powerful
there if they are the reason this law was passed.
-j
|
290.204 | | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Thu Sep 10 1987 12:02 | 8 |
| re:.78
Valid reason to be concerned, and to have it inspected before connecting to the
water main. Not a valid reason to require a licensed plumber. Also note that
you are required to have a licensed plumber even if you have your own well and
leach field, and can in no way contaminate public water supplies.
Paul
|
290.205 | This stuff is caused by lawsuit-itis | STAR::SWIST | Jim Swist ZKO1-1/D42 381-1264 | Thu Sep 10 1987 13:44 | 22 |
| Couple of points:
1) Note that many Mass towns will not issue electrical permits to
homeowners either. So it's not just plumbing.
2) I think the real reason for a lot of this stuff is fear of lawsuits
by the municipalities (not trade lobbying, they're busy enough).
Town budgets do not allow them to REALLY inspect things 100% (think
about how much time that would take even for a small DIY job) -
they're afraid if they miss something and a disastrous flaw causes
damage or injury, then the town will be sued for having passed it
during inspection. With licensed tradespeople, they have some
assurance that it's done right without quadrupling the inspection
budget (also gives them someone to point a legal finger at).
3) I have some experience building in rural Maine where there is
as little government as possible. The only thing they inspect for
is the septic system. They don't care if you kill yourself or if
your own house collapses. They do care if you pollute the
water/ground. This corroborates an earlier reply on the way it
really should be.
|
290.601 | Meter Box Replacement | ERLANG::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Thu Sep 10 1987 14:37 | 35 |
| A couple of weeks ago half the circuits in my house fizzled and went
dead. After figuring out that all of the dead circuits were on one gang
in the electrical panel, I checked the incoming main lines, and sure
enough, one of them was completely dead. So I called the light company,
and they came by to check it out. As they were opening the meter
box outside the house everything suddenly came back on. The guy
tightened down the nuts on the main leads, and told me that I ought
to get the meter box replaced. He said that once this starts happening
it will keep recurring. A temporary fix is to slam on the side of
the box, but ultimately I will need to have a new one.
So I called a couple of electricians, and this was the result:
1) Electrical Contractor - it will take two men, a licensed guy
at $37/hr and a helper at $17/hr about three hours to do the job
(including travel time to and from). Parts is about $50, total will
be somewhere in excess of $200.
2) Local Electrician - it will take him "about three hours" and
cost me "a couple of hundred dollars".
My question is, does anybody know if these are reasonable prices for
this job? I have looked at the box myself, and I can't conceive of how
it could take an experienced electrician three hours to replace it. It
looks like you just pop the meter out, disconnect the leads, unscrew
the box, and reverse the process with a new one. Barring any unforseen
difficulties, I would estimate the job to take about 1/2 hour (or
less). I generally do electrical things inside the house myself, but
have no desire to mess with the main current coming in from the street.
I realize there is some overhead in running your own business, but
maybe I should reconsider my career goals if these guys are making
$200 for 1/2 hour of actual work.
- Ram
|
290.206 | old noters never die, they just digress! | TOOK::CAHILL | Jim Cahill | Thu Sep 10 1987 16:05 | 0 |
290.602 | simple job to replace existing meeter | CLUSTA::MATTHES | | Thu Sep 10 1987 16:36 | 0 |
290.603 | Sometimes you have to look a little deeper | ANOVAX::GUYDISH | JOE | Thu Sep 10 1987 17:16 | 11 |
| being a former electrician, I can tell you that someetimes
there is more to changing a meter base than meets the eye.If I had
more info. on what type of service you have i might be of more help
but basically to change a meter base involves installing new service
cable because the old cable oxidizes, becomes brittle and is sometimes
impossible to insert through a new weatherproof connector. Depending
on local codes it could also involve paying for a electrical inspector
to pass the job before the power company will energize you service.
Without seeing the service, it is hard to say what is a good
price and what is not, but 3 hours sounds pretty reasonable.
JOE G.
|
290.604 | | MORMPS::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Thu Sep 10 1987 22:54 | 2 |
| how do you do this yourself in that i assume you're working with LIVE
wires? Or - how do you get your line from the street turned off?
|
290.605 | cost me $500 for a LOT more work | HPSVAX::POWELL | Reed Powell (HPS/LCG Marketing | Fri Sep 11 1987 02:04 | 20 |
| I had the service up-ed from 100 to 200, and a new panel (I supplied
the panel) installed. The electrician (actually 2 of his guys)
removed the old panel, including removing and tagging the cables,
and installed the noew box, reconnecting and (almost) getting the
labeling correct, as well as replacing the service cable from the
meter to the panel, and from the roof to the meter, and replacing
the frame/socket that the meter sits in (the meter itself was not
replaced). They supplied the service cable (around 20' or so).
They did this in about 6 hours max, and it cost me $500. Judging
the relative amounts of work involved, I'd say your estimate, on
the surface, sounds high - but remember that these things are not
linear - there is a certain minimum you have to start at, but my
gut feel is that is should not take 2 guys 3 hours to do your job,
even if it includes running new service from the roof to the meter.
If it required new service from the meter to the panel, then that
is something else possibly, depending on the effort involved in
getting to the panel inside your housed (finished vs unfinished
walls, etc.).
|
290.606 | more details | ERLANG::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Fri Sep 11 1987 19:15 | 22 |
| Well, the meter box is on the outside wall of the house at chest
level, and easily accessible standing on the ground. This is a 100
amp service, and the service panel is directly behind the meter
box on the inside of the house. Any wires that would have to go
through are just pushed through the wall, but I'm not aware that
these would have to be replaced anyway.
I was told that a "short piece" of SE cable would also have to be
replaced. The wires from the street attach to the house just about
ten feet off the ground, so I think that is only about six feet
of cable to add. I didn't mention this originally because it seems
like a trivial thing. I can see that on some houses there might
be complications, and maybe that's why the estimates are running
so high, but in this case it still seems to me like a really quick
job.
I would also like to know what has to be done to get the power from
the street shut off. Just call the light company? I'm not going
to do this myself anyway, but I'd just like to know for future
reference.
- Ram
|
290.607 | Power is not turned off | HPSVAX::POWELL | Reed Powell (HPS/LCG Marketing | Sun Sep 13 1987 18:55 | 8 |
| They do not shut off the power from the street - they just work
on it live. In fact, they needed to use a drill, etc., which doing
mine, so they pulled out this quasi-extension cord that had clamps
(sort of like jumper cables) on one end, and just clamped into the
cables on the roof.
-reed
|
290.608 | Public Service will turn it off - safer | CLUSTA::MATTHES | | Mon Sep 14 1987 07:36 | 20 |
| re .3, .-1 They do turn it off. I was told to pull the meter by
some friends. PS doesn't mind if you turn it off, but they want
to be there when you turn it on!
Actually, the day that I wanted to change the box, they came out
bright and early and disconnected the cables from the pole at the
house. They'd rather do that then have a 'live' open meter exposed
to the homeowner or the neighborhood children. The only problem
I had was after they left I pulled the old box off went to put the
new one on and discovered that it was larger and I needed a bigger
piece of plywood to put it on and turned on my table saw and ...
Sure is different from working with wire wrap wire and 5 volts.
I guess for a smaller task, you could pull the meter, cover it somehow
-I'm sure you'd be held liable if some kid put his fingers in the
socket- and tell PS when you are done. They install the meter and
reseal it. Yes, you had to break the seal when you pulled it.
I'd give them a call first telling them that you were giong to do
it. Far better than a call saying you did it.
|
290.609 | Just so we aren't ASSUMING someone said it: | XANADU::SCHNEIDER | Dennis Schneider | Mon Sep 14 1987 17:28 | 25 |
| I'm a stage electrician/stage lighting designer as a hobby. Electricians
work with exposed power in large and dangerous quantities all the time.
The average non-electrician-type human doesn't.
So, just to cover the possibility:
When you are working on SERVICE CABLE, you are working on that portion of
the electrical system between a transformer and your circuit breaker panel.
The transformer takes transmission line voltages - say 660 volts or more
- and drops down to service voltages of 220 volts "center-tapped" so you
can run 2-110 volts legs off of "Neutral".
There is no terribly effective overload protection for the amperage rating
of this part of the system - 100 amps at 220 volts - so, in general, the
copper wire itself forms the "fuse": too much power and it simply melts
and, when the copper flows apart, a brief but spectacular shower of sparks
occurs, and the circuit is broken. Any metal tool that shorts this circuit
will "compete" with the copper wire for become a "fuse".
So, while the economics of changing a meter base are interesting, please
keep in mind that THIS STUFF CAN KILL YOU.
Dennis
|
290.610 | You can't be too careful | CLUSTA::MATTHES | | Tue Sep 15 1987 10:38 | 12 |
| re .-1
I agree whole heartedly. That is precisely why I breathed easier
when Public Service ofted to 'disconnect' the house by cutting the
cable from the street at the house where it meets the service entrance
cable (15 feet up). I couldn't get fried that way.
When working on circuits around the house, I know I turned the breaker
off, with exposed wires in front of me I touch the would be hot
wire either to ground or the nuetral. I shouldn't see any sparks.
It's a surer technique than using a meter. The one time it's a
defective meter. You can't be too careful.
|
290.611 | I don't like that | CADSE::MCCARTHY | | Tue Sep 15 1987 11:27 | 19 |
| RE: -1
> When working on circuits around the house, I know I turned the breaker
> off, with exposed wires in front of me I touch the would be hot
> wire either to ground or the nuetral. I shouldn't see any sparks.
> It's a surer technique than using a meter. The one time it's a
> defective meter. You can't be too careful.
I avoid the possibility of creating sparks as much as possible.
Instead of touching the "maybe hot" to neutral or ground I test
my "wiggies" on a known live circuit before using them on the circuit
I am going to work on. If for some reason the wires you are testing
happen to be live and happen to have a large load on them, see what
kind of sparks you create!
I don't recommend this method of testing a circuit at all.
mac
|
290.612 | No sparks here | VIDEO::DCL | David Larrick | Tue Sep 15 1987 14:19 | 12 |
| re .9, .10
I'm not sure what "wiggies" are, but I use a test light. First test the
test light on a known good circuit, then test the circuit in question.
And I use only my right hand for this testing - my left hand stays in my
back pocket until I'm sure the circuit is dead. You see, an electrical
circuit from arm-to-arm, or from your left arm to either leg, goes through
your heart. Right arm to either leg is nasty, but is less likely to kill
you.
If you insist on using the spark method, I hope at least you wear goggles.
|
290.613 | Keep Calling | XANADU::HASKELL | Franklin Haskell - VTX Engineering | Tue Sep 15 1987 17:12 | 16 |
| There can be a huge difference between bids for the same job (in
any subcontractor type job). Travel time frequently makes a large
difference. Call the guy in the yellow pages who lives two streets
over but does not have a big ad (or any ad at all). Tell the
electrician you can help. Usually they won't take you up but if
you make the job seem simple they may back off some: "Well, if
I don't have to climb my ladder we might be able to do it for $150."
Look for the electrician working at the new house down up the block.
"Hey, I see you installing a meter box. Do you think you could
do one for me, too?"
One thing you do have to remember is that when a particular electrician
works on your house he owns it. That is, he is now responsible
for your entire electrical system. Granted, your man may be able
to wheedle his way out of blame for the upstairs bedroom socket
but he will have to expend time and energy doing it.
|
290.614 | A little more detail please | CADSE::MCCARTHY | | Tue Sep 15 1987 17:28 | 18 |
|
> One thing you do have to remember is that when a particular electrician
> works on your house he owns it. That is, he is now responsible
> for your entire electrical system. Granted, your man may be able
> to wheedle his way out of blame for the upstairs bedroom socket
> but he will have to expend time and energy doing it.
Could you expand on this? If a permit get pulled, why would
the electican be responsible for anything more. The permit (at
least in Quincy) goes into detail as to number of recepticals,
switches, etc... that are to be installed/replace/worked on.
I would think that the burden of proof ("Yes my house burned
down because of that outlet") would be on a home owner if he claims
that a licenced electrian did the work. If no permit was pulled
then that is called STUPID! :-)
mac
|
290.615 | Agree - poor test | CLUSTA::MATTHES | | Tue Sep 15 1987 22:23 | 9 |
| re .10 ,11
I also don't like sparks and agree with you. The key phrase was
"I know I turned that breaker off." I know that this is a 'dead'
circuit. I have a map of the wiring, saw the lights go out or radio
go off. The LAST thing I do is touch the wire to ground or neutral
just before I touch the wire with my fingers.
I agree that this is a poor test if the wire may be hot.
|
290.616 | Dangerous test practice! | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Wed Sep 16 1987 00:51 | 6 |
| Do you light a match to test for gas?
BTW- linemen in some cases ground the line they are working on
on both sides of where they are just in case the line becomes live.
-j
|
290.617 | clarify | CADSE::MCCARTHY | | Wed Sep 16 1987 00:58 | 26 |
| RE: "I don't know what "wiggies" are"
The best way to describe these is an electrian's version of the
two-wire neon lamp tester. A "set of wiggies" (I think the name
wiggies is a brand) is a tester with two long black leads with a
red and black probe on the end of either. The case is red and the
atvantage of them is that:
1) they take a HELL of alot abuse
2) the tell you 110V vs 220V
3) if you happen to have DC current, it will tell you which
is positive.
The pair I have are left over from my apprentice days. If I need
to know EXACT voltages I use my Radio Shack digital meter. Since
I got that, I will never go back to analog!
RE: -1
> circuit. I have a map of the wiring, saw the lights go out or radio
> go off. The LAST thing I do is touch the wire to ground or neutral
A MAP of the wiring, what a luxury! Some day I will get around
to doing that for myself. :-)
mac
|
290.618 | Sorry I brought it up - you're right DANGEROUS | CLUSTA::MATTHES | | Wed Sep 16 1987 08:16 | 21 |
| Youse guys is missing the point. At the risk of belaboring the
issue ...
I agree that it is a dangerous practice. Wiggies, a known good
light, meter, or if you don't know what breaker the outlet is on
turn on a radio real loud and when it goes off - that's the breaker.
Now which is the more dangerous practice, finding out that one of
the wires in the box is on another circuit (fry the electrician
who did it) by touching it (which you have to do to do what you're
trying to do) or by holding the insulation and touching it to ground
first.
It's a last resort. I've exhausted all other techniques. I figure
someday I may forget something and this is going to save my a$$.
If I DO see sparks, it's time to quit and do it some other day since
I must be too tired to do it right anyway. Kinda sorry I brought
this up.
re .-1 The map of the wiring - somewhat out of date, incomplete,
and seems to be changing out from under me.
|
290.619 | back on track | CADSE::MCCARTHY | CADSE software engineering | Wed Sep 16 1987 10:12 | 27 |
| RE: .17
Sorry if it sounded like I was attacking you personally. The
majority of people would realize that touching two bare wires together
is dangerous. Because this is a public confererence (internal only
of course), someone may think that when they run into the need to
test a wire all they need to do is touch a couple together and see
if there is a spark. I was only trying to let is be known that
this can be dangerous.
Now back to the original subject: Back when I was doing electrical
work and we did meter replacements (we called them service changes
and they almost always included a new panel) the wires from the
street were always live (BOSTON EDISION and MASS ELECTRIC). The
first thing we did was clime a WOODEN ladder and cut the wires feeding
the house, hook a piece of 12-2 romex with a 20A fuse in line directly
to the street side of the line (110v). Hooking the new wires was
done live, again from a WOODEN ladder with insulated tools!
The cost of materals for a 100A 220V as I recall (for using
PVC pipe, required in Quincy) was around $200-250. I don't know
what the consumer got charged. The labor rates (1.5 years ago)
were $35/Hr for my boss and $20/Hr (that is what he charged them!,
I didn't see $20/hr) for me for job that could take anywhere from 4 to
9 hours.
mac
|
290.620 | Liability Costs | MANANA::HASKELL | Franklin Haskell - VTX Engineering | Wed Sep 16 1987 22:49 | 21 |
| Re: .13
First, I am speaking from New Hampshire. I know things are more,
shall we say, stringent in Massachusetts.
My primary source for my comments was a very well respected
electrician. He was probably being a little extreme but the point
he was making was perhaps more accurately the flip side of what
I wrote. His point was that if he or any other electrician were
to come along and work on an electrical system that someone else
had installed they could be blamed for anything that went wrong
after they finished. That is, the original electrician could say:
"Oh no, when I left everything was perfect. Those other guys must
have screwed something up."
Now what I don't know is if this is New Hampshire law or if my
electrician was remembering court decisions he had heard of.
Maybe a 'simple' service change won't generate this kind of liability,
but it is a foolish electrician (or any tradesman) who doesn't keep
himself aware of the liabilities involved -- and charge for it.
|
290.621 | Militarized Wiggie? | CENSRD::SCANLAND | I'd rather be driving a ... | Thu Sep 17 1987 17:34 | 35 |
| RE: Wiggies
I was an electrician in the Navy - steel floors (deck), steel walls
(bulkhead), steel ceilings (overhead), steel, steel everywhere with an
ungrounded 3-phase electrical system. Rule number one - signed by the
CO and therefore considered a direct order from on high "Do not work on
energized wiring or equipment, ever." Never. Reality: Using wooden fuse
pullers to force a relay in a motor controller. I did it a lot. Not
saying it was the safest method and it could've landed me before the
Old Man.
We used a thing we called a "Wiggins." My CPO told me it was the name
of the guy (company) that first supplied these to the Navy. A little
black box with a red and black lead. Neon lamps on the front to
indicate voltage (24, 110, 220, 450), frequency (DC, 60, 400Hz) and
polarity (if DC). The most important tool I ever carried. I still have
mine and depend on it.
Rule 2: always check your Wiggins on a live source (at the same voltage
and frequency you will be checking) before using it.
Once in a hurry to get a job done I mistakingly tagged the wrong
breaker out of service. Leaning against a stainless steel table in the
kitchen (galley) I touched a hot 450VAC line. I never, ever worked on a
piece of gear again without following Rule 2 and using the Wiggins.
Rule 3: Always use your Wiggins, even when you KNOW the circuit is
dead.
Just a little military perspective on the subject. Rule 1 will insure
you are not electricuted and Rule 2 will insure that you are not
betrayed and Rule 3 will verify 1. Kinda Zen-like, huh.
Back to home_work. Hope I didn't stray too far,
Chuck
|
290.207 | Back to the orginal discussion (sort of) | VAXWRK::INGRAM | Larry Ingram | Fri Oct 23 1987 14:47 | 41 |
| I'm in the process of replacing the wiring from my house to the
garage. The old wiring had a fused junction box on the wall which
was attached to the feeder conduit coming in through the wall.
Since I am running the wires from the breaker box in the house
(2 dedicated breakers for the garage), I want to remove this fuse
box and use something else. Since GFCI is required for garage
wiring, I thought I could do this:
to outlets on to outlets on
circuit #1 ! ! circuit #2
------- -------
! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
GFCI ! . ! ! . ! GFCI
outlet ! ! ! ! outlet
! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
! . ! ! . !
------- -------
! !
\ /
---------------
! 4" !
! junction !
! box !
---------------
The juction box will be screwed to the wall and attached to the
conduit through the back of the box. I anticipate keeping the
GFCI outlets very close (will probably use an offset fitting to
link the 2 boxes) and will run the wires directly from the conduit
to the box containing each GFCI. This means 6 wires through the
box so I can use a small one.
Does this look ok? Anything I should be aware of? I just got
finished digging up and replacing the EMT that I buried 'cause
the do-it-yerself wiring book I have didn't say I couldn't :-(
Thanks,
Larry
|
290.208 | an addendum... | VAXWRK::INGRAM | Larry Ingram | Fri Oct 23 1987 14:50 | 4 |
| If it wasn't obvious in the previous note, the fuse box I want
to remove is in the garage.
Larry
|
290.209 | Re: .-1 and -2 | XANADU::SCHNEIDER | Dennis Schneider | Mon Oct 26 1987 16:27 | 32 |
| Adding the pair of GFCI outlets is fine - but I believe you MUST replace
the fuse box because one of the following is probably true:
1. The feeder to the garage is UNFUSED on the source side (UNLIKELY)
or
2. The garage feeder is fused above 20 AMPS;
or
3. The feeder 220V feed (likely).
In the first case, you'd have no choice: you MUST put a breaker panel in
place of the fuse box or keep the fuse box: a GFCI isn't overload protection.
In the second case, you'd need overload protection to drive the GFCI outlets
(which are usually rated as 20 AMP "thru", 15 AMP outlets.) Everything you
hook to a circuit must be rated AT LEAST as high as the breaker.
In the third case, you need to provide separate 110V breakers for each of
the legs you split off the 220V feed.
If NONE of these are true, you have a 110V 20 AMP or less feed - and have
no need for two GFCI outlet legs since all you have is one leg worth of power.
If you are going to put in a breaker panel, look at the economics of using
GFCI breakers as an alternative to a normal breaker plus a GFCI outlet.
This is usually marginally different at best.
Dennis
|
290.210 | | VAXWRK::INGRAM | Larry Ingram | Mon Oct 26 1987 18:53 | 23 |
| re: .-1
The garage has 2 feeds:
15A 120V switched (switch is in the kitchen) with a 15A breaker
in the service entrance panel (basement of the house).
20A 120V un-switched with a 20A breaker in the service entrance
panel.
The switched feed will be used to power lighting only (~ 1000W). The
un-switched feed will be used for the outlets, door opener, etc.
The garage is small, so I do not anticipate using any large power
tools in it (famous last words), hence the lack of 220V.
Now, since neither circuit is greater than 20A @120V and they both have
breakers installed at the service entrance, I don't need to add a
panel in the garage. Am I correct? Also, since the switched 15A feed
will not power any outlets, does it still need a GFCI?
Thanks for the help,
Larry
|
290.211 | No GFCI for lights | XANADU::SCHNEIDER | Dennis Schneider | Tue Oct 27 1987 11:46 | 7 |
| Given the two 110V feeds, you don't need a distribution panel in the garage.
You don't need a GFCI for the lighting circuit.
You need only ONE GFCI for the 20A outlet circuit.
Dennis
|
290.212 | Door Openers... GFCI protection? | CHART::CBUSKY | | Tue Oct 27 1987 11:54 | 7 |
| Code question (Mass.) about garage wiring?
Do outlets mounted on the ceiling for garage door openers need to
be GFCI protected? I don't think so but I thought I'd ask because
you never know.
Charly
|
290.213 | junction box, not a panel | HPSVAX::POWELL | Reed Powell (HPS/LCG Marketing | Wed Oct 28 1987 15:41 | 23 |
| re .-1: I cannot find anything saying that the GDO outlets must
be GFI
What you want is a junction box, not a breaker panel. In fact, you
should have two junction
have 2 junction boxes, one for each leg, rather than combininb into
one box.
If you do for some reason put in a breaker panel, be sure that there
is no
semblance of a master breaker in it (like there is in the main box):
the code only allows one such breaker for the entire house (to avoid
confusio
in emergencies, etc., over whether the power is on or off). In
any event,
it owuld be kind of rough, and not too kosher, to try and wire up
a
breaker/distribution panel for multiple 110v legs coming in and
leaving.
-reed
|
290.690 | is everything in this house on ONE fuse? | HPSMEG::LUKOWSKI | I lost my A$$ in the '87 CRASH! | Tue Nov 03 1987 17:02 | 24 |
| >>This makes no sense at all, why would everything go out when only 1 of
>>4 fuses is out.
It makes perfect sense. Whoever wired the place didn't give any thought to
the potential of what could happen such as what DID happen to you.
>>Should we have this checked?
There may not be a problem other than bad planning. You could pay someone
to check this or you could do it yourself. First, check all lights and outlets
to verify that they currently work when all fuses are in. You could use a
night-light for the outlets. The reason for this is that if there is a
dead outlet or fixture, you will know before you start instead of assuming
something is dead because you pulled the fuse. Next, pull out a fuse and go
back over every outlet/fixture to see which ones are now dead. Put fuse back
in and go onto the next and repeat this procedure until you know exactly what
is powered by which fuse. By doing this, you can 'load balance' everything
to avoid this happening again or you may determine that you need more
circuits. 60 amps isn't considered enough by today's standards but you
may be able to get by with it.
-Jim
Disclaimer: I'm not an electrician but I do have opinions.
|
290.691 | | GORDON::GORDON | | Tue Nov 03 1987 17:21 | 9 |
| I renovated a three decker in Cambridge which, according to the
new owner, had an updated set of electrical services. The neat,
clean row of brand new 60A/6 fuse boxes sat in a row on the wall.
Four boxes, one for the common house and one for each of the three
small apartments. In each box was six 15A glass top fuses. Into
the box ran a large wire from the meter for each service. Out of
the box ran one wire. Some upgrade!
Bill G.
|
290.692 | old houses - few electric devices | SHOREY::SHOREY | a legend in his own mind... | Tue Nov 03 1987 18:01 | 24 |
| a friend had a three family which i rewired a couple of years ago.
one day he was ironing while his wife was drying her hair and the
refrigerator went on - poof - the whole floor went out.
i turns out that there was one service going to the entire floor
for general use, one service for one outlet in the kitchen for the
refrigerator (which he had move to another wall/outlet) and one
service for the stove.
i would guess that this might be common in older houses which weren't
designed to handle all the devices we use now. i'd also guess that
if you do what .1 suggested you will find that you are probably
in a similar situation.
what to do? once you find out which outlet goes to which service,
and how much each service will handle, make sure that your
refrigerator/microwave/iron/hairdryer/television/etc either aren't all
plugged into the same service or aren't all used at the same time.
if you can't work around what you have then you should probably
have the wiring updated to a 100A service, and run seperate lines
for high load areas.
bs
|
290.693 | Dear landlord, | PUNDIT::MOCCIA | | Tue Nov 03 1987 18:07 | 8 |
| Um. You said this happened in your apartment, so I assume
you don't own the building. Why not dump the problem on
your landlord? It's his property; you're not responsible
for the electrical service.
With a knack for the obvious,
pbm
|
290.694 | | HPSMEG::LUKOWSKI | I lost my A$$ in the '87 CRASH! | Tue Nov 03 1987 19:12 | 6 |
| Re: .4
Better read .0 again. Did you forget your morning cup of coffee? :^)
-Jim
|
290.695 | A 3-family experience | GLIVET::RECKARD | Jon Reckard 264-7710 | Wed Nov 04 1987 10:37 | 13 |
| We own a three-family with 100 amps for the whole house, including 3 electric
range circuits, a dryer circuit and one room with electric baseboard. (We've
only tripped one circuit once, believe it or not.) We looked into getting
(at least) one more main box from the street, and after two phone estimates
of $800 and $1000, we gave up. Sound crazy, so maybe we could've looked more.
Re-wiring as suggested in .1 or .2 shouldn't be too difficult, tho.
By the way,
> 60A up and 60A down, totally separate.
Are you sure? You were surprised that your whole apt was on one circuit;
there might be other surprises too. Our 3-family was originally something
else. Several (thousand!) additions and modifications later, it's a 3-family.
A few circuits are shared by 1 or more apts.
|
290.696 | Oops | NISYSE::MOCCIA | | Wed Nov 04 1987 11:34 | 10 |
| Rats! I'm going to get a caffeine fix right now.
Seriously, when we moved into our larger but older home, we found
several "modifications" that were apparently done by somebody's
brother-in-law or equivalent part-timer that we're now in the
process of correcting. Mostly has to do with "creative" wiring,
in our case.
pbm
|
290.697 | Check EVERY outlet | LDP::BURKHART | | Wed Nov 04 1987 15:31 | 33 |
290.698 | Dont stick a penny under it | WIKKET::BRANT | | Wed Nov 04 1987 19:33 | 5 |
| Years ago we lived in a small 2 bedroom house built in the
twenties or thirties. Code in those days must have close to
nonexistent because we had ONE twenty amp circuit with fuse
supplying the entire house. There was never any problem finding
which fuse was bad.
|
290.699 | Sure? Make sure anyway. | VIDEO::DCL | David Larrick | Fri Nov 06 1987 13:56 | 6 |
| The BOOM in .9 wasn't because of creative wiring; it was because of faulty
technique.
Even if you make a comprehensive map of your electrical system, you should
still check with a test light or meter before assuming an outlet is really
dead. "Pretty sure" isn't good enough. "Very sure" isn't good enough.
|
290.700 | check the wire gague! | ASIC::UTTLEY | | Fri Nov 13 1987 15:40 | 17 |
| -< 20 AMP CIRCUIT ? >-
RE: .8
I strongly question wether you actually have a 20 amp circuit or
if someone screwed a 20 amp fuse in because they had a problem with
15 amp fuses blowing. As dumb as this may seem, I've seen it in
several houses. Actual 20 amp circuits were very rarely used at
all with the old 60 amp service. Even in new homes, 20 amp circuits
are generally used only for high demand areas, like the kitchen
counter. Lighting is generally wired into 15 amp circuits.
This is defiantely worth looking into. Check the cables that leave
the fuse box, the wire gague should be printed on the outer jacket.
A true 20 amp circuit will be wired with 12 gague wire (will be
labled 12/2), and a 15 amp circuit will be wired with 14 gague wire
(will be labled 14/2). If that branch circuit with the 20 amp fuse
is wired with 14 gague, get that fuse out of there right away and
replace it with the 15 amp variety. Oversize fuses are a fire hazard.
|
290.334 | Circuit Breaker Blues | DECSIM::TAYLOR | | Thu Jan 07 1988 12:31 | 19 |
|
Hi. I need some help. The power in my condo has gone off twice.
The first time I was on vacation and luckily we had someone come
in to check on our cats. None of the circuit breakers within the
house had been tripped. The problem was rectified by going outside
to the main circuit breaker and toggling that.
The second time it happened sometime late last night while I was
asleep. Same circumstances. I called the electric company and they
said it's probably a 'weak' main circuit breaker which needs some
work and I'd need to hire an electrician.
Neither time was there an excessive amount of electricity being
used and even if there was, I would think that the internal breaker
would have taken care of it.
Has this ever happened to any of you? Do you think I need to get
an electrician to look at it? Is it true that that isn't the electric
company's responsibility? Any advice would be appreciated.
Mathew T.
|
290.335 | | PSTJTT::TABER | Transfixed in Reality's headlights | Thu Jan 07 1988 13:10 | 30 |
| You have the new style main-breakers that are in a box outside the
house? Do they seem to trip when it gets especially cold out? It's
probably the breaker, but you should have a look in the box some cold
evening to make sure you're not getting condensation or anything.
> Is it true that that isn't the electric
> company's responsibility?
If the problem is the main breaker, then yes, it's true. Where the
electric company's stuff stops and yours begins varies from state to
state, but they all agree that by the time you get to the house side of
the meter, you own it. The main breaker is on your side of the line.
> Has this ever happened to any of you?
I've never had a main breaker go, but I've had smaller breakers die on
me. It happens. It seems like cold and damp contribute to it, but
breakers aren't supposed to last forever anyway. If you're sure it's the
problem, then you just replace it and forget it.
> Do you think I need to get an electrician to look at it?
Probably. The power company will probably have to pull the meter for
the main breaker to be replaced, and they probably won't do it for you.
That varies from state to state too, so you should check with the power
company and your town electrical inspector. Replacing the breaker is no
hard trick (as long as the meter is pulled) so there's no reason you
couldn't do it if you have the confidence and all other parties are
willing to go along with it.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
290.336 | Tripping breakers | NSSG::FEINSMITH | | Thu Jan 07 1988 14:18 | 9 |
| In my previous life in Field Service (Before I joned DEC), I have
seen breakers trip without an actual overload. A common cause was
a loose connection at the breaker(or a high resistance within the
breaker) causing it to heat up and trip. As in .1, you should have
power off via meter removal to safely work on the main breaker
yourself.
Eric (zapped more than once)
|
290.337 | experience speaks | AIMHI::BERNARD | | Thu Jan 07 1988 16:02 | 12 |
| This very thing happened to me a few years ago. I simply went to
the local electrical supply house and got a new one. Replacement
was easy. I pulled out the meter, made the change, put the meter
back in and turned it on. I called the electric company BEFORE I
took out the meter and right after I put it back. There was someone
there the very next morning to inspect the meter and replace the
seal. The only bad part was that the new breaker cost over $30.
Good luck
JMB
|
290.338 | | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Thu Jan 07 1988 20:49 | 3 |
| This may not apply, it happened in our condo development more than
once until we put really good locks, and pick guards, on the closets
housing the main breakers
|
290.339 | try this | SVCRUS::CRANE | trust me, I know what I'm doing | Mon Jan 11 1988 18:50 | 15 |
|
A similar problem happened at my house just after I bought it.
The power just went away from the house for no reason at all and
would all of sudden come back somewhere between 1 and 6 hours later
I went to my box and checked everything out and there was no problem
at all. My final check was to hang my voltmeter off of the main breaker
first on the incoming side and then on the outgoing side.
After everthing checked out o.k. I called mass ellectric and the
problem turned out to be one of their connectors gone bad.
so if you are toggling the main breaker and it cures the problem
even though it is not tripped call the electric company and tell
them.
John C
|
290.331 | CROUSE-HINDS breaker went bad... | DELNI::MHARRIS | Mark Jay Harris, Term Srvr Mktg Mgr | Thu Mar 17 1988 13:37 | 18 |
| I had my MAIN circuit breaker (200AMP) go bad last fall. It was
only installed 20 months earlier. The electrician claims HE could
not get any credit or no-charge replacement from his distributor.
It is a CROUSE-HINDS unit and I would like to call them to see if
they would re-imburse me for the 'almost new' unit as there
MUST be some length of warranty on this thing.
DOes anyone know:
1) How long breakers are typically warranteed for?
2) How to contact CROUSE-HINDS (telephone number)?
3) If I'm wasting my time trying to get a refund?
Mark
|
290.332 | | MYVAX::DIAMOND | Not one of the Beasty Boys | Thu Mar 17 1988 18:43 | 7 |
|
Crouse-Hinds headquaters is in Syracuse NY. The telephone directory
number for Syracuse is (315) 555-1212. They should have a listing
for them.
Mike
|
290.333 | ex | MYVAX::DIAMOND | Not one of the Beasty Boys | Thu Mar 17 1988 18:44 | 5 |
|
PS.
You want the plant on "7th North St" (seventh North street).
|
290.340 | Trust me, I know what I'm doing, zappp!!! | TOOK::ARN | | Thu Mar 31 1988 20:20 | 15 |
| For a lack of a better place, I'll put this here. I have a seperate
breaker box coming off my fuse box for new circuits. It has space
for 16 breakers, 8 on each phase. One side is constructed of the
thinner type (approx. 3/8" wide) 15 to 20 amp breakers going to
lighting and outlets. The other side has 4, double width, breakers
going to the garbage disp.,refrig, ect. all 115v 20 amp.. No, they
are not 220v breakers. My question is what is the difference between
the skinnier 20 amp 115v breakers and the wider version? This box was
added in the 50's, so could these be older breakers? Can I replace
one of these with two of the skinnier versions to add another cicuit?
Thanks in advance
Tim
|
290.341 | Question about your breaker box | ULTRA::STELL | Doug Stell, LTN2-2/C08, Pole J9, DTN 226-6082 | Thu Mar 31 1988 20:32 | 8 |
| Question on .6
The supply rails down the center of most boxes alternate between
the two sides of the 120/240 line. This permits the narrower 120
volt breakers to split the load between the two sides while allowing
the wider 240 breakers to pick up both sides. Do your wider 120
volt breakers put everything on only one feed????
|
290.342 | Safety Feature? | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Thu Mar 31 1988 20:56 | 3 |
|
Could it be that the other breakers are wider to prevent putting
more 'working' breakers in, thus overloading the Main Fuse Box?
|
290.343 | Piggy Backs | LDP::BURKHART | | Fri Apr 01 1988 12:18 | 17 |
| I beleave the skinny ones are called "piggy backs" and are normally
used when you need an extra circuit or two without having to add
a new box. I believe in Mass they are only allowed in old work any
new construction requires the use of the full size ones. The basic
problem is the possability to overload the box. Also if I'm not
mistaken these breakers sit on the same side of the 220 line so
they can't be used for a 220v circuit, What you have to do in that
case is put 2 piggy back (=4 circuits) breakers in next to each
other than use a metal jumper thinky that conects one leaver from
each pair of piggy backs.
Question to .0 what amp main service do you have? I hope that
all those piggy backs are just for sectionalizing the house and
not for a lot of additional LOADs.
...Dave
|
290.344 | Underpowerd??? | TOOK::ARN | | Fri Apr 01 1988 12:41 | 12 |
| re last few
Currently I have a 60 amp service. The box was added when the kitchen
was remodeled in the 50's. Other than the kitchen there are two 20 amp
lines I ran in the basement for power tools and a line to the bathroom
I redid. I realize I need a 100 amp service and I have a box ready
to go, but I am trying to run a 20 amp line out to the garage and
wanted to see if I could make it fit. Should I give it up and convert
to a 100 amp box? It's a small house.
Tim
|
290.214 | subpanel feed across attic crawlspace | DECSIM::TELLIER | Lord of the Ring-Arounds | Mon Jun 27 1988 14:56 | 22 |
| Well, I'm *finally* getting around to wiring the addition that I put on my house!
I've decided, for various reasons, to put a secondary distribution panel in the
addition, fed from a breaker in the main panel. Most of the load will be standard
lighting & wall outlets. I will need one hefty branch for a spa heater/pump unit.
Since no direct route exists from the existing main to the addition (they're on
opposite ends of the house) I figure on running the feed for the 2nd panel on the
outside of the house, up the wall to a point where I can feed it thru the attic
crawlspace, over to the other side where it would enter the addition thru an interior
wall. I figure I'll need to use conduit for the exterior wall run. But what
about the run across the attic? Can I just lay the cable across the ceiling joists?
(probably not). Should I staple it to the underside of the roof rafters? (trusses,
actually). Or, does the code say I need conduit all the way? My reading is, no;
it's not exposed to weather, and doesn't need to be "protected" from anything else.
By the way, I might consider "multiple" subpanels with lower capacities, rather
than one larger panel; that way, I could use smaller guage feeders, and maybe save
a few $$ in copper costs. I haven't figured this in any detail yet. I just
cringe at the thought of 75 feet of 6/3-CU !
Any ideas/comments/suggestions?
Thanks!
Jim
|
290.215 | I'd think of an alternative | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Mon Jun 27 1988 15:36 | 9 |
| > I just cringe at the thought of 75 feet of 6/3-CU !
Most people use Aluminum these days for this.
Either way, the run you described will be expensive.
Does your addition have a basement? Are you sure there's no way
to make the run shorter and keep it inside the house?
Does the existing house have a basement?
|
290.216 | Can't go thru existing basement... | DECSIM::TELLIER | Lord of the Ring-Arounds | Tue Jun 28 1988 17:56 | 28 |
| RE: < Note 450.91 by VIDEO::FINGERHUT >
> Most people use Aluminum these days for this.
> Either way, the run you described will be expensive.
I'll have to agree it's worth considering; I haven't
investigated the AL options available in breaker connecctions,
i.e. the AL feeder would be taken off a breaker in the main
panel and feed the distribution bus in the 2nd panel. I guess
they must make AL-compatible hardware for this, huh?
> Does your addition have a basement? Are you sure there's no way
> to make the run shorter and keep it inside the house?
> Does the existing house have a basement?
The Main panel is in a totally finished part of the house,
which is the "basement" half of a split-entry type. The
addition is a garage, on grade, with 1-1/2-story living space
above it. I can't really see any way to go, except via the
attic crawlspace, or totally outside the house (like running
conduit under the eave, which wouldn't look all that good!).
So, I'm pretty well convinced that will have to be the route.
It's just that I wasn't sure about the need for conduit etc.
Jim
|
290.217 | Replacing 100AMP with 200AMP? | CURIE::BBARRY | | Thu Jul 21 1988 16:45 | 17 |
| This seems like the most appropriate place to ask this question.
I am designing an extensive remodeling of my house. Currently,
the house has a 200 AMP meter and a 100 AMP box. After the remodeling
I will definitely exceed the 100 AMP capacity of the current box.
If memory serves me right, I can't just replace the main breaker
with 200AMP breaker. So I will have to replace the main box.
Most of the panels I am familiar with have two rows of breakers. I
need a box that can support about 30 breakers, but the problem is that
the current service entrance area will not have room for a tall
panel. The Question: Are there panels with 3 or 4 rows of breakers,
or panels with the bus bars running horizontally?
Also, does Mass Codes have any limits on the location of service
panels? Currently the panel is at the base of the stairs in the
basement, but I want to move the stairs about 30 ft away?
|
290.218 | | MTWAIN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Thu Jul 21 1988 17:33 | 13 |
| The main disconnect ("main fuse") has to be "as close as practicable
to the service entrance", or something like that. Basically, the
code doesn't want a long run of wire from the meter to the box that
is not protected by a fuse or breaker. I suspect you could put
a 200-amp fuse/breaker where the current box is now, and have that
as the main disconnect, then run a cable to where you want the
actual breaker box to be, and that would be acceptable. Or, you
could put some of the breakers where they are now and put an
auxilliary breaker box someplace else. I've got that setup:
a 200-amp main fuse feeding a box with about a dozen breakers in it,
and another box with a 100-amp breaker in it that has a cable coming
out of it and going to a box with a couple dozen breakers in it
in another part of the house.
|
290.857 | HELP: Fuse box ticking! | YODA::SALEM | | Fri Oct 07 1988 15:17 | 9 |
|
My fuses box is making ticking noises! What the heck is it?
Sould I call the electric company? An electric repair service?
Or should I not worry?
I've never heard this ticking/clicking before. It's not loud.
You have to be very close to it in order to hear this noise.
- Ted
|
290.858 | Call someone for a piece of mind. | BAGELS::RIOPELLE | | Fri Oct 07 1988 15:40 | 15 |
| I've never had a fuse box tick in me, there's nothing mechanical
in there to make it tick. Maybe the flow of electricity is causing
one of your breakers to make a clicking noise, DO YOU HAVE
BREAKERS??????. The other possibility is the telephone company used
to mount a transformer aside of the electrical box, and I know at
my dads house it would make a noise before it would die. For a piece
of minfd you should call the electric company and see if they will
come out and check it. They usally only own responsibility to
the meter, and from ther meter back is yours to get an electrician
in. But, they might have an idea or just come out and check it for
you.
Good luck !!
|
290.859 | Is it the meter?? | CENSRD::MANDEVILLE | | Mon Oct 10 1988 16:02 | 6 |
| My meter is behind the breaker box, so it is close enough to hear
the meter when I'm working in the box. If this is your case try
going out and listening to the meter and see if it's the same noise.
John
|
290.860 | | BPOV02::S_JOHNSON | Buy guns, not butter | Tue Oct 11 1988 15:29 | 11 |
|
I just realized the other day that my Mass. Electric Company meter has a clock
in it! It separately meters power usage in "peak" hours and "off peak" hours,
and you end up getting charged less for the "off-peak" usage. This
was corroborated by my bill. There are two sets of numbers on the meter.
The meter has a knob stick out of the front of it, maybe for clock adjustment.
This may be the source of time-bomb ticking.
Steve
|
290.861 | | YODA::SALEM | | Wed Oct 12 1988 13:10 | 12 |
|
Well, I have not found out what the ticking was - but it went away.
I'm not sure where my meter is because I live in a condo and I
think the all the meters are in one location.
I'll ask my electric company about this noise - but it sounds like
there is nothing to worry about.
thanks
- Ted
|
290.77 | Recent Cost Estimates? | BCSE::SPT_LEPAGE | | Thu Oct 13 1988 11:31 | 11 |
|
I've ben giving some thought recently to upgrading the current 100 amp
service to 200. The house is about 23 years old, and has 4-bedrooms,
workshop, 2-car garage, etc., so it would probably be a worthwhile
investment, and I could certainly use the extra circuits.
Has anyone had this sort of work done recently, and what was the cost?
Thanks for any info,
Mark
|
290.78 | | DNTOWN::REPPUCCI | | Thu Oct 13 1988 15:08 | 11 |
|
I upgraded to 200 amp service last year, along with quite a
few other electrical additions, and it cost me $800. From what
I've heard from a few contractors, the upgrade will be anywhere
from $700 to $1000, depending on who you get. From my experience,
I wouldn't put to much faith in the guy who will do it for $700.
Good luck
Joe
|
290.79 | ROBBERY WITHOUT A GUN | HEFTY::LEMOINEJ | ANOTHER VIEW | Fri Oct 14 1988 12:55 | 11 |
| I had my old 100 amp service (fuses) upgraded to a new 200 amp service
(breakers)everything was changed from the weatherhead on down, he was the
lowest estimate by 50.00 dollars and all he charged was $590.00,
told me 100 amp was $500.00. After watching the amount of work involved
in installing a new service I can't believe what some people in
this conference have been paying!! Is Western Mass that much cheaper
than the rest of the U.S.................
john
|
290.80 | I need electrician soon!!! | STEREO::COUTURE | Gary Couture - Govt. Syst. Group - Merrimack NH | Fri Oct 14 1988 13:59 | 14 |
| I too am in desperate need of an electrician to convert my house 100 amp box
to 200 amp so i can add a feeder to a box in my garage which I am putting the
final touches on. The elcetician who was supposed to do it has refused to
return my calls for 6 weeks and I cant wait any longer. I tried calling
a couple of teh large commercial elctrical places in manchester/goffstown NH
and they gave me outrageous quotes of 1200$$$!!. I have already priced out
the box (square D 40 circuit 200 amp is $210 and breakers run $6-12) so total
for matrls should be 350$. Can anyone reccomend a REASONABLE electrician
who can do this upgrade for me SOON in New Boston NH (near Manchester)?
Some electricians ont want sucjh small jobs.
Any help will be greatly appreciated since my garage doors & door openers are
being installed this weekend and I wont be able to use them until my electrical
problems are solved!
|
290.81 | save some $$$ | NSSG::FEINSMITH | | Fri Oct 14 1988 14:10 | 10 |
| RE: -1, when you change from 100-200 Amp service and the new breaker
panel is the same brand as the old one, the old breakers should
be interchangable and reusable, saving a nice chunk of change. The
main would have to be replaced as would the cable to the meter though.
Unfortunately, many craftsmen (inc electricians) are damn independent
these days and work when they feel like it! When the growth of the
area slows down and there is a lot less work to go around, I bet
their attitude will change.
Eric
|
290.82 | reason... | STEREO::COUTURE | Gary Couture - Govt. Syst. Group - Merrimack NH | Fri Oct 14 1988 14:26 | 3 |
| Nope, The panel I have is a strange brand and hard to find breakers for.
So I decided to spend a few hundred extra bucks and go with the best ---
Square D.
|
290.83 | Contractor referrals are in 2000 ff | LEVEL::DCL | David Larrick | Fri Oct 14 1988 15:16 | 3 |
| re .24:
See topic 2008 for electrican recommendations.
|
290.84 | DIY! | BOSTON::SWIST | Jim Swist BXO 224-1699 | Fri Oct 14 1988 15:32 | 5 |
| You can legally do electrical work on your own house in NH. You
need a permit and an inspection, but that's it.
Obviously this is not a small job, but if you have the skills, go
for it.
|
290.85 | Except if... | BOSTON::SWIST | Jim Swist BXO 224-1699 | Fri Oct 14 1988 15:36 | 5 |
| I wrote the previous reply under the assumption that your external
wiring is OK for 200A (from the meter back to the pole). (I
think 4/0 aluminum is the right size). Obviously if that's not the
case then you need help since either a new meter or wires to the
street are jobs for a pro (for one thing you work on the wires LIVE).
|
290.86 | yes but | STEREO::COUTURE | Gary Couture - Govt. Syst. Group - Merrimack NH | Fri Oct 14 1988 15:42 | 11 |
| Im not sure of current wire size. I generally do all my own wiring (new circuits)
but I HATE trying to stuff all those wires in the box. Also I was told i should
upgrade to a double ground?? If I cant find someone to do it I may end up
doing it myself but I would sleep betterif the work on the main was done by an
electrician..
Yes I have checked out the current reference list with no luck,
gary
|
290.87 | 60amp fuse to 200amp breaker | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Oct 14 1988 15:50 | 32 |
| You can work on your own electrical in Mass also. However, as the
previous reply mentioned, you are working with some serious voltage
and I for one would not care to tackle that without knowing what
I was doing.
I had my 60 amp service upgraded to 200 amp recently. It cost me
$850. $50 of that was just for the permit. What a ripoff. But
I guess Chelmsford has to get its money somehow.
All that is left is for the electric company to replace the meter
and make the final connection permanent. It is so nice to have
breakers instead of fuses. Now, when I accidently blow a circuit,
I just reset the breaker.
By the way, the previous owners had renovated the kitchen in the
early 70's. They did a horrible job. When I ran the microwave
oven with the toaster oven at the same time, I popped a breaker.
It turns out they had put a small breaker box attached to the fuse
box for the kitchen. They had put 15 amp breakers in this little
box. So, whenever I wanted to use the microwave, I had to shut
off the toaster oven, and vice versa. When the service was upgraded,
the electrician told me that the wires were actually able to handle
20 amp breakers, so he upgraded the breakers. He said I should
not have any more problems with blowing the breaker.
This was a nice advantage. BTW, this house was built in 1901.
It has everything from knob and tubing wire to modern stuff. You
wouldn't believe the horrible job that the previous owner did on
most of the stuff he touched. Whew!!
Ed..
|
290.88 | total job? | NYEM1::MILBERG | Barry Milberg | Mon Oct 17 1988 01:06 | 15 |
| What is the charge for replacing the line from the 'pole' to the meter?
Is that normally done by your private electrician or the local power
company?
Does the power company charge?
Even though I'm in Northern NJ, I still wonder what the cost was
for anyone having experience. My service is now 100 amp, but I'm
sure the connections to the pole needs to be upgraded, based on
age and aesthetics if nothing else (35 year old house and wires
to pole are frayed)!
-Barry-
|
290.89 | Price is right | SALEM::MOCCIA | | Mon Oct 17 1988 11:50 | 7 |
| Normally, the power company is responsible for service from the
source up to and including the meter; you own everything beyond
the meter. It shouldn't cost you anything to have the line
replaced.
pbm
|
290.90 | free - if they need it. | TFH::DONNELLY | Take my advice- Don't listen to me | Mon Oct 17 1988 11:55 | 10 |
| re -.1:
When I upgraded I called mass-electric and they said no charge to upgrade
the line to the street. But they wouldn't touch it until everyone else was
done and inspected.
But, the line didn't need it. The upgrade was from 60amp to 200amp and
those wires were pretty old.
Craig
|
290.91 | A double ground??? | POOL::LANDMAN | VMS - Not just for minis anymore | Mon Oct 17 1988 12:16 | 6 |
| > .... but I HATE trying to stuff all those wires in the box. Also I was
> told i should upgrade to a double ground?? If I cant find someone to do
> it I may end up ....
What purpose does a double ground serve? Did they say why it was
needed?
|
290.92 | not quite | CADSE::MCCARTHY | One tick away | Mon Oct 17 1988 16:14 | 19 |
| >< Note 343.33 by SALEM::MOCCIA >
> -< Price is right >-
>
> Normally, the power company is responsible for service from the
> source up to and including the meter; you own everything beyond
> the meter. It shouldn't cost you anything to have the line
> replaced.
>
> pbm
I don't think you ment "up to the meter". Around here (MA, ie Boston
Edison, Mass Electric) they will run the line from the pole to the
building. This means if you have to get it up to the correct height
on the outside of the building (that is if you have an overhead
feed). I am not sure what happens if you have an underground feed.
bjm
|
290.93 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Tue Oct 18 1988 07:13 | 5 |
| Here in colorado theirs stops at the weatherhead connections and
the meter, meter base excluded.
-j
|
290.94 | in NH - to meter | LEPAGE::LEPAGE | | Tue Oct 18 1988 11:15 | 11 |
|
In NH, PSNH is responsible for all connections, cable, etc. to the meter.
The meter box, and cable beyond is the owner's responsibility. I had to
have PSNH replace the cable from the weatherhead to the meter recently. It
was about 23 years old, and water was actualy getting inside the cable
sheathing, and dripping out once inside my house!
PSNH came out the next day after I called them about this - good response.
-Mark
|
290.95 | | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Tue Oct 18 1988 13:08 | 10 |
| In Mass, the electric company is indeed only responsible to the
house. However, they are also responsible for the meter itself.
At least that is what they were responsible for when I recently
had my electric upgraded. I don't know if the electric company
actually changed the wire to the house. It was a 60amp service
and is now 200amp, so I assume they would have had to replace the
service from the pole to the house.
Ed..
|
290.369 | Amperage upgrade - Checking service entrance box | RUBY::J_MAHON | | Tue Oct 25 1988 19:32 | 12 |
| Hi,
I need to update the service from 60 to 100 amps. From the breaker
box to the entire house is no problem at all; however, I just read
something in a DIY book that says that the service entrance box
(outside wall with the meter on it) has to be checked to make sure
it is the proper size. I didn't know that this box may need to
be changed also. How do you determine if the box is of proper
size/amperage, etc? Thanks.
Jack
|
290.370 | | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Tue Oct 25 1988 19:44 | 7 |
|
Chances are the meter box is 60 amp, too. Plan on replacing that.
Be advised that in MA you have to have a licensed electrician install
the service entrance cable.
CdH
|
290.371 | | 21663::BBARRY | | Tue Oct 25 1988 19:45 | 6 |
| Somewhere on the face of the meter it will say. In all likelihood
if you have an older house with 60AMP panel the feed will be 60AMPS,
because thats all they thought was needed back then. If I remember
the markings are obvious to a casual observer.
Brian
|
290.373 | Check with the wiring inspector | GWYNED::MCCABE | | Wed Oct 26 1988 15:33 | 6 |
| When I added an addition and upgraded the service 3 years ago, I
was told by the wiring inspector that the power company wants to
see the permit pulled by a licensed electrician before they will
hook up the new service. That was in Milton, Ma.
Chris
|
290.374 | that's what I was referring to | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Wed Oct 26 1988 17:51 | 4 |
|
CdH
|
290.376 | Instead of 100 amp check into 200 amp | BAGELS::RIOPELLE | | Thu Oct 27 1988 12:14 | 6 |
| You may also want to find out how much more a 200 amp service will
cost you. When putting in a 100 amp service you may find that it
doesn't cost much more, and I don't think the electric company cares
they usally charge the same price for the hookup.
Ed who has a 100 amp service but wishes he put in a 200 amp now.
|
290.219 | Breakers with color coded screws? | MISFIT::DEEP | This NOTE's for you! | Thu Oct 27 1988 15:08 | 21 |
|
Seems like a good place for this...
I have a 20 AMP 240v double breaker (GE) that I am planning to use for a
240v circuit to a table saw. I know how to do the wiring, and I have a
book that explains the code and all that, but the one thing I can't seem
to find is an explaination of why there is color-coding on the screw
terminals in the breaker, (i.e. one screw it tinted red, and the other
is tinted green.) Has anyone seen this; know what it means? Does it
matter which phase of the 240 gets carried on which color wire or screw?
I was simply going to copy the pattern for all the baseboard heaters that
are already in the panel, (i.e. if they have black on the top screw, I'll
put black on the top screw, etc.) but I'd really like to know if there is
a difference here.
Thanks!
Bob
|
290.377 | Not necessarily legal in Mass | BOSTON::SWIST | Jim Swist BXO 224-1699 | Thu Oct 27 1988 15:23 | 7 |
| re: .6
Local codes always override state/national codes. And there are
more than a few towns in Massachusetts that will not issue electrical
permits to homeowners, despite the fact that there is no statewide
law against it, like there is for plumbing.
|
290.220 | read the code book | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Thu Oct 27 1988 15:34 | 9 |
|
Electrically, inside the breaker, there is no difference, but to
the code, there is. Your book should point that out. If you use
3 cond + gnd wire to hook this up then be sure and tape the end
of the wire red, to show it's a red wire, and use the red terminals
on the breaker and/or outlet.
CdH
|
290.378 | Electrical permits are up to the town | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Thu Oct 27 1988 15:45 | 11 |
| > Local codes always override state/national codes. And there are
> more than a few towns in Massachusetts that will not issue electrical
> permits to homeowners,
You may remember that petition that was going around to overthrow
the plumber union's monopoly on plumbing in Massachusetts. There
was a clause in there saying that in addition, no town could have
a law overriding the state law to allow homeowners to plumb.
This is something that was left out of the state electrical code.
|
290.221 | | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Thu Oct 27 1988 15:48 | 8 |
|
Now that I think about it, I take that back. As far as I know the
code only requires that the breakers be marked for the ampere rating.
Receptacles have to have the grounded and grounding connections
marked.
CdH
|
290.222 | What's in a color! 8-) | MISFIT::DEEP | This NOTE's for you! | Thu Oct 27 1988 16:35 | 16 |
|
re : -.1 & -.2
If I use 3 wire + gnd, I won't need to mark any wires. I'll already have
the black and red hot leads, and the white nutral, and the bare ground.
My concern was if it mattered which color (red or black) went to a particular
terminal on the breaker. I doubt that it does, but I wanted to check anyway.
Seems to me that this would only come into play with 3ph power.
Since it's a GE breaker (made in Singapore) I guess they ran out of black
paint and decided to use green instead!
At least I know enough not hook the ground up to it just because it's green!
8^)
|
290.379 | Homeowners permits | BAGELS::RIOPELLE | | Fri Oct 28 1988 14:10 | 7 |
| Re .9 - Then if >I live in a town that says I can't have a permit
they're giving me a bunch of B.S. My town told me I couldn't
have a homeowners permit. But if what you said is true they
have the authority to issue on and can't turn me down ??
|
290.380 | | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Fri Oct 28 1988 15:39 | 19 |
| > Re .9 - Then if >I live in a town that says I can't have a permit
> they're giving me a bunch of B.S. My town told me I couldn't
> have a homeowners permit. But if what you said is true they
> have the authority to issue on and can't turn me down ??
I'm not sure if you're talking about plumbing or electrical.
For electrical, a town can require that an electrician does your
work. (They can override the state law that says you can do your
own electricity).
For plumbing, there was a proposal to allow you to do your own work.
The proposal also said that a town couldn't override that, and prohibit
you from doing your own work.
The way it stands now, I don't know if a town can override the state
law that requires a licensed plumber. My guess is that they can,
if they wanted to, but the local plumbers wouldn't like it.
|
290.381 | pole or no pole... | RUBY::J_MAHON | | Fri Oct 28 1988 18:46 | 10 |
| OK, I'm clear on the service entrance box. I'm still unclear about
one thing:
Is the 100 amps available (though only 60 being used) at the wires
going into the service entrance box, OR does something have to be
done at the pole to increase the amperage?
Thanks for the replies.
Jack
|
290.382 | Yes and NO | FREDW::MATTHES | | Sat Oct 29 1988 12:17 | 46 |
| Normally, yes.
I upgraded from 100 to 200 some time ago - about a year or so.
When they replaced the meter, meter box and the weatherhead cable
they did not replace the wire to the pole. The guy doing the work
had a golf match and had been real helpful to me so I (being the
nice guy that I am) did not press him to do so at the time. He
said that if I ever used or nearly used the amperage to call and
have them come out and replace it. The cable from the street is
different from the weatherhead and house wiring. It's designed
to dissipate the heat in the air.
Last week I was on vacation and dropped by the office. "We will
only replace it with what's already there. We put in cable that
will handle the load at the original installation when the house
was built in that area." I said then why did the guy tell me to
get it replaced ?? "Well I'll have to come out and look at it."
He showed up right when he said he would the next morning. "Yup
that cable's designed to handle 140 amps per leg. We use that to
drive 4 and 5 unit apartment buildings at 100 amps per." He made
the point again about being able to dissipate the heat in the air.
I pointed out to him that when I was running the arc welder in the
garage and the wife is ironing and one of the kids is drying his
hair and the other is running the table saw while the microwave
is cooking lunch that I was not interested in GENERATING the heat
in the cable to the street suffering the resultant IR drop.
After walking around and jawing for awhile he finally sighed and
told me that "he was here to satisfy the customer." He'd replace
the cable but I probably would not see a difference.
We then looked up at the house and he said "You know it's too bad
you can't get in there. We normally use a 5/8 eye-bolt instead
of the little hook. We may tear off the corner of the house with
the weight of the new cable." Of course I hadn't thought of that
aspect of the job. Fortunately I was able to get in there behind
the knee wall and mount the eye bolt.
So I now have a wire to the street that is at least 4 times what
I had previously.
So, the answer is YES and NO. You don't really need it. You will
probably never notice the difference. I'm also at the end of the
transformer run for my leg of the grid. All of these things add
up.
|
290.383 | Location of .13 | FREDW::MATTHES | | Mon Oct 31 1988 11:54 | 3 |
| BTW
The previous reply, .13, was PSNH in NASHUA, NH.
|
290.384 | Go for 200 | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Mon Oct 31 1988 16:09 | 11 |
| I agree with the reply about going straight to 200 amp. I just
did this myself. I don't expect to ever need the full service,
but I am glad it is there. I never checked on the difference in
price for 100 instead of 200, as I had every intention of going
all the way the first time. My job cost $840.
Ed..
This was in Chelmsford, Mass - where the electrical permit cost
$50.
|
290.223 | More wiring info | GWYNED::MCCABE | | Mon Oct 31 1988 16:12 | 10 |
| They were probably trying for blue and got green. It is very common
to refer to the 2 hot conductors as a red and blue leg. The reason being,
in many cases the wiring coming into the panel is all black, and
tape is used to differentiate the conductors. Red and Blue - Hot
leg. White - Neutral. By the way, if you are only feeding the saw,
you probably don't need a neutral, unless it has a 110v lighting
outlet. Most 220v tools have a 3 prong plug. 2 hots and a ground.
Use 12/2 wg and tape the white conductor red at the panel and outlet
box for a 20A rec.
Chris
|
290.385 | was that the material charge ? | AXIS::BERUBE | | Mon Oct 31 1988 18:16 | 4 |
|
Re:15 did you do it yourself ??
|
290.386 | Complete with labor | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Tue Nov 01 1988 20:09 | 9 |
| No, the $840 was the total cost. I would not have even come close
to fooling around with live lines coming from the pole. I may be
brave and willing to tackle things I don't exactly know, but that
was one job I was petrified of. Especially after all of the horror
stories of people being electricuted when they have accidently come
upon them.
Ed..
|
290.387 | Pop the meter ... | FREDW::MATTHES | | Wed Nov 02 1988 11:01 | 26 |
| RE .-1
Shoot, no problem. The power company is responsible for 'up to
the meter'.
Pop the meter and you are isolated.
I was led to believe that you could pull the meter and do what you
wanted. (You'd probably need a permit and an inspection when complete)
I called PSNH (Nashua) to tell them that I was going to do that
and that I would need them to come put it back. They said that
they would be out to pull the meter as well. With the meter out
you have live electrodes exposed at people level. They don't trust
the homeoener to cover it properly. They cut the wire at the
weatherhead. This was going to be replaced anyway.
The inspection turned out to be beneficial. I had done everything
right except the ground. I needed to upgrade the size of the wire
to the water pipe and I needed a ground rod at the main box as well.
BTW. I had everything set when they pulled the meter. All the
runs were labelled so that I could put things back properly in the
new box. What I failed to realize was that the new box was much
larger than the old and I now needed a larger sheet of plywood to
put it on. As I was trying to figure out how I could power my table
saw, I happened across a scrap of plywood just the right size.
|
290.224 | question | NPOPO::THIBAULT | | Wed Nov 02 1988 11:27 | 7 |
| you guys seem to know a lot about this subject. Is it ok to use
12-2 wire for electric baseboard heaters. If yes does the black
and white go onto each term of the 20 amp double???? don't i need
a neutral wire??
thanks
|
290.388 | Depends on the Power Company | AXIS::BERUBE | | Wed Nov 02 1988 11:37 | 16 |
|
re:18 Not all power companys are the same. I did'nt catch
where the original noter was going to do the work, but you are correct
about New Hampshire, how ever not so in Mass, Mass electric and
FG&E, and others *do not* supply meters or service drop materials. They
will after the inspector calls it in come and crimp the sevice drop
connections but in the interim the electrician makes temporary
connections with some approved type of split bolts designed for the
purpose of such. Check with your power company to be sure, I'm not
aware of any in Mass that do but prehaps where there are several
Municipal run power company's there may be some that do provide
to the meter.
Steve
|
290.225 | electric heat | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Nov 02 1988 11:47 | 13 |
| > 12-2 wire for electric baseboard heaters.
Yes.
> If yes does the black
> and white go onto each term of the 20 amp double????
Yes.
> don't i need a neutral wire??
No. You'll have a ground (bare) wire.
|
290.226 | Learn first | NSSG::FEINSMITH | | Wed Nov 02 1988 11:54 | 21 |
| If you are using a double breaker, then you are set up for 220v.
If your baseboard heater is 220v, you're fine, HOWEVER, you colors
are wrong. 220V does not use neutral like 110v, but the hot colors
are black and RED. White is neutral ONLY! You could probably use
12-2, but would need some red tape to remark the white wire to
show that its hot.
There is nothing wrong with asking questions, thats probably the only
way to learn (and a darn good way), but if you are not sure of your
ability at this point, let someone go into the breaker panel who has
some experience and learn from him (or her) first. Most of us who
reply in this notes file have been doing this for many years, but we
all started somewhere. Electrical (and plumbing, construction, etc)
are not really difficult if you know what you're doing.
If you want to learn more about electrical work, there are quite
a few good books on the topic, so learn first, stick your hand in
a panel later.
Eric (getting off my soapbox)
|
290.227 | thanks and thermostat question | NPOPO::THIBAULT | | Wed Nov 02 1988 15:08 | 9 |
| thanks for the info. I couldn't locate it in the green code book.
My backround is mechanical engineering, So I'v e had the requisite
electrical courses. I've also done a fair amount of wiring for
110 outlets. I've also hooked up some 220 circuits before. But
don't recall the details.
Another question. are you familiar with how to hook up a thermostat
to drive the heater. again, I have 4 wires coming out.
thanks paul t.
|
290.228 | Wiring a thermostat | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Nov 02 1988 15:54 | 17 |
| Didn't we just see this question refused to be answered somewhere
else?
Just think of the thermostat as a switch. That's all it is. There's
two input wires to connect to your black and white 12-2 wires from the
breaker box and two output wires to run to the heater. The bare wire
grounds the thermostat and continues on to ground the heater(s).
From the heater, you can attach additional heaters in series. Just
make sure the total watts of the heater doesn't exceed the capacity
of the termostat which is probably in the neighborhood of 5000.
The thermostat can probably be wired to either end of the heater.
The 2 wires at the opposite end of the heater probably get tied
together with a wire nut.
But you really should be able to tell this from the instructions.
|
290.229 | | MAMIE::THOMS | | Wed Nov 02 1988 16:04 | 22 |
| >< Note 450.100 by NPOPO::THIBAULT >
> -< question >-
>
> you guys seem to know a lot about this subject. Is it ok to use
>
> 12-2 wire for electric baseboard heaters. If yes does the black
> and white go onto each term of the 20 amp double???? don't i need
> a neutral wire??
>
> thanks
>
Is it o.k to use 12/2? Depends on the load. Electric baseboard load should
be calculated at 125% of the rated output. In other words if you have a 3000w
heater: 3000 X 1.25 / 240V = 15.65 amps - 12/2 would be fine. However if
you hook up a 5000w heater: 5000 X 1.25 / 240V = 26 amps - 12/2 wouldn't work,
10/2 would. Make sure you mark the white wire by taping it black or red or
(use a marker) at the connections.
No a neutral is not used in 240V single phase branch circuits. Metal heater
enclosure should "grounded" by means of the bare copper wire.
Ross
|
290.389 | You don't have to replace old panel. | MAMIE::BERKNER | Tom Berkner 264-7942 MK01 | Wed Nov 02 1988 16:20 | 22 |
| When I increased my service from 100 to 200 amps, I took the easy
way. I installed a new 200amp panel a couple feet away from the
original panel. I ran new 2" conduit and 4/0 conductors up to a
new meter base which the power company gave me. I also ran new
conduit and conductors up to a new mast head and installed a very
large hook for the power company to connect onto.
I put a 100 amp, 240 volt breaked in the first position of my new
panel and ran service entrance cable over to my original box. This
made the original box a branch panel (quite legal). The power company
came out and removed the old lines upto the old masthead and installed
new lines and a new meter. I then disconnected the old entrance
cable from the original box and connected the cable from the 100
amp breaker in the new box to the old box. Then I had only to turn
on the new 200 amp breaker and I was done.
This saved all the work of disconnecting the wires from each circuit
in the old box and putting them into the new box. It relieved time
constraints, since I was only without power while I was connecting
to the new box.
Does this all make sense?
|
290.391 | Right - that's easier. | FREDW::MATTHES | | Thu Nov 03 1988 11:51 | 7 |
| re .20
Absolutely right. That is easier. However, I wanted the new box
in the same place as the old and the sub-panel is now 70' away in
the garage.
Leave it to the marketing types to take the easy way out.
|
290.230 | THANKS | NPOPO::THIBAULT | | Thu Nov 03 1988 11:52 | 11 |
| thanks for all your help folks. I hooked it up last night and burnt
my house down.
really--- everything is working fine.
Paul Thibault
|
290.392 | No grounds in the old circuits. | WOODRO::BERKNER | Tom Berkner 264-7942 MK01 | Thu Nov 03 1988 13:05 | 12 |
| re .21
Since the house was built in the fifties, grounded circuits were
not installed; therefore I didn't have to separate the grounds from
the neutrals.
Yes, I did move the earth ground from the old box to the new.
re .22
Lazyness is a virtue!
|
290.393 | Ground loops? (I like Buzz words!) 8^) | MISFIT::DEEP | This NOTE's for you! | Fri Nov 04 1988 16:12 | 13 |
|
re: Tom's approach...
I like it! Seems to make a lot of sense, however..
If the new box (200 AMP) is put in like that, and ATTACHED to the old one,
would the grounds and nutrals still have to be separated?
Also, what size wire is required for a 200 AMP entrance, and if it's already
there, (doubtful, but you never know) can you just replace the main breaker
w/ 200 AMP and have the power company change the meter?
Bob
|
290.394 | | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Fri Nov 04 1988 18:56 | 10 |
|
That's the way it's normally recommended.
You may have to change the meter box unless it's already rated for
200 amps. Not just the meter.
CdH
|
290.395 | How about this scenario??? | TOOK::ARN | Tim Arn LKG2-2/BB9 226-7572 | Wed Nov 09 1988 17:09 | 16 |
|
This is starting to sound good. So if you have a 60 amp fuse
panel which a small breaker panel was added to, and you want
to upgrade to 200 amp service, you could do it in two stages?
Could I first remove the small addition box and mount up the
200 amp box and put all of the original circuits back in?
Then I would run the 200 amp box, with the main breaker removed,
still as a subpanel like the original? Then I could do all the
new meter mounting work. And when that's done, I could have the
power company come and switch me over to the new meter and
move my earth ground over to the new 200 amp panel? Then I would
have a new 200 amp main panel and a 60 amp fuse subpanel.
Sound good?
Thanks
Tim
|
290.396 | ans to .25 | WOODRO::BERKNER | Tom Berkner 264-7942 MK01 | Mon Nov 14 1988 13:00 | 18 |
| re.26
Close. I don't see any necessity of removing the 200 amp breaker
from the subpanel. The circuit will be protected by the breaker
currently installed in the main panel to feed the subpanel. You
would actually bring the feed into to 200 amp main breaker. Granted
this 200 amp breaker won't be accomplishing much at this time.
Keep in mind that you may have to separate the grounds and neutrals
in this subpanel.
Later, when you bring in the new service, you will then need to
place an 60 amp breaker in the new main panel (previously the subpanel)
to feed the subpanel (currently the main entrance panel). At this
point, you may need to separate the grounds and neutrals in the
60 amp subpanel and combine them in the 200 amp main panel.
This sounds like fun.
|
290.397 | Question: How to check for XXX Amps service" | MAMIE::EARLY | Bob Early CSS/NSG-CSSE | Fri Nov 18 1988 19:43 | 15 |
| RE: 200 amp service vs 100 amp service
Question: How does one tell what "amperage" service one has ?
Is "100 Amps", 100 amps total, or 100 Amps per leg ?
I have two 100 amp fuses (100 for each of two legs). Is that
100 amp service or 200 amp service ?
The various books I've checked aren't quite that explicit.
Bob
|
290.398 | | ASABET::HO | | Tue Nov 22 1988 16:05 | 3 |
| re .28
You have 100 amp service.
|
290.402 | Double breaker in single slot | HANNAH::DCL | David Larrick | Wed Nov 30 1988 14:04 | 9 |
| [Relocated from 2744.38, to avoid starting a(nother) tangent there:]
What is/are your opinion(s) on those breakers which put two
circuits on one position in the box? I was thinking about useing
one of these for the two lighting circuits. I think they only go
to 15 amps max, but thats no problem -- although wired for 20 amps
(as are all circuits in my house) neither of the lighting circuits
would even come close to 15 amps. (i.e they'd easily fit on a
combined 20 amp circuite.)
|
290.403 | No plagiarism here | HANNAH::DCL | David Larrick | Wed Nov 30 1988 14:42 | 2 |
| Oops, I should mention that the question in .0 was asked by Charlie
PEEK::Hammond.
|
290.404 | | HANNAH::DCL | David Larrick | Wed Nov 30 1988 14:51 | 20 |
| I've used 'em. They're a lifesaver when you need just one more breaker.
They're not especially cheap - sorry, I don't remember the price exactly.
I don't remember the 15A restriction. In fact, I'm pretty sure the two
doubles I have in my box are 20A.
The counter help at the electric supply store where I bought mine said they
were being phased out. He may have even said the code would soon prohibit
them. I haven't heard anything further on this subject; his statement may
well have been a ploy to get me to buy more of them.
If you use several of them, give some attention to load-balancing between
phases. In the worst case, you could have several more circuits on one
phase than on the other.
I suspect that an electrical inspector would object to a breaker box full
of the things; after all, there's a good reason why a box has a limited
number of slots.
I have had zero trouble with mine.
|
290.405 | Not real expensive... | CAMLOT::LEPAGE | | Wed Nov 30 1988 16:27 | 5 |
|
I just put 2 20-amp twin breakers into my box (Square D). They
cost $15.50 each (from Seamens Supply in Manchester, NH).
-Mark
|
290.406 | | PEEK::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-02/Y05 -- dtn 381-2684 | Wed Nov 30 1988 17:04 | 15 |
| (1) Thanks for moving this note. Good idea to avoid yet another
tangent. (Sorry for starting the first one...)
(2) Guess my remembery about a 15 amp limit was wrong.
(3) I certainly wouldn't fill up a box with them either. The only
time I used them was in a full box ('spec' build construction --
yuck!) and I needed to free up two positions to put electric
baseboard in a newly finsihed basement. In most cases you do a
pretty good job of balancing the load accross the phases if you
always put pairs of twin breakers in physically adjacent
positions, thus putting a pair of circuits on each phase. Of
course this assumes that the circuits are about equally loaded.
(4) Anyone know of any specific code limitations on these?
|
290.407 | Check the load | MAMIE::THOMS | | Wed Nov 30 1988 18:09 | 39 |
| >< Note 2846.4 by PEEK::HAMMOND "Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-02/Y05 -- dtn 381-2684" >
>
>
> (1) Thanks for moving this note. Good idea to avoid yet another
> tangent. (Sorry for starting the first one...)
>
> (2) Guess my remembery about a 15 amp limit was wrong.
>
> (3) I certainly wouldn't fill up a box with them either. The only
> time I used them was in a full box ('spec' build construction --
> yuck!) and I needed to free up two positions to put electric
> baseboard in a newly finsihed basement. In most cases you do a
> pretty good job of balancing the load accross the phases if you
> always put pairs of twin breakers in physically adjacent
> positions, thus putting a pair of circuits on each phase. Of
> course this assumes that the circuits are about equally loaded.
>
> (4) Anyone know of any specific code limitations on these?
There is no direct code limitations on this type of breaker. However, you
should get a hold of a NEC code book and read Article 220 on branch circuits
and feeder calculations. The only problem you might have is overtaxing your
feeder. 220-10 (a) Ampacity and Computed Loads. Feeder conductors shall have
suffcient amapcity to supply the load served. In no case shall the load of a
feeder be less than the sum of the loads on the branch circuits supplied as
determined by Part A of this article after any applicable demand factors
permitted by Parts B,C,or D have been applied.
Now hear me, I'm not implying that you have too much load on your subpanel.
I'm saying you ought to calculate the loads as specified in Article 220 to
see if your setup is o.k.
Ross
|
290.231 | Another add panel | INABOX::HOWARD | | Thu Dec 01 1988 17:17 | 23 |
| I have a need that is same as .0
Main panel - 200A, all breaker slots used
therefor cannot supply a breaker for sub-panel
Sub Panel I have is 4 slot with NO slot for panel breaker.
2 hot buses, 1 neutral/ground bus (contiguous)
Is the following legal?
Main Panel Sub Panel
Load Side ------#6 to HOT buses--------->
HOT Wire added breakers
as if they were in
Neutral ------#6 to GRD/NEUTRAL bus---> main panel
Black to breaker
GROUND ------ to GRD/NEUTRAL bus---> White to GRD/NUETRAL
bus
Bare GRD to
GRD/NEUTRAL bus
MAX 50 A in sub
Bob
|
290.232 | An idea | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Thu Dec 01 1988 18:11 | 10 |
| I see a few problems. For a sub-panel, I believe that its input
must be attached via a breaker in the main panel. Also, neutral
and ground can only be tied together at the service entrance, so
the subpanel can't have them run as one wire from the main panel.
If you have run out of room in the main panel, and the sub panel
will be adjacent (or fairly near) the main panel, why not relocate
2 breakers (110) or 1 breaker (220) from the main to the sub, thereby
freeing up the required positions.
Eric
|
290.233 | ideas-part 2 | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Thu Dec 01 1988 18:12 | 5 |
| As a followup, you can purchase a separate ground bus for the
subpanel, and remove the tie-in from the neutral bus to box ground,
thereby floating it.
Eric
|
290.234 | Sub-Panel needs a breaker | MISFIT::DEEP | The moving hand NOTEs, then having nit... | Thu Dec 01 1988 18:16 | 8 |
|
Or if the sub-panel is not close enough to relocate some of the circuits,
you might consider the 2-in-1 breakers that are being discussed elsewhere
in this conference. Two of them, used on the existing circuits, could free
up enough room for your 50 Amp breaker to feed the sub-panel.
Bob
|
290.235 | May not be possible | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Fri Dec 02 1988 11:22 | 6 |
| Unfortunately, some panel types(especially older ones), can not
use the half size breakers. If you're not sure, the label on the
panel door will list the breaker types that can be used. Just do
a cross reference, or check with a knowledgable supplier.
Eric
|
290.236 | SQUARE D all the way | INABOX::HOWARD | | Fri Dec 02 1988 11:53 | 8 |
| The panel and breakers are SQUARE D all the way. If I understand
previous replies to this note, only SQ D will fit in the panel.
I've checked, no listing of compatible breaker types.
Maybe my best bet is to forget the 4 slot sub (a price I couldn't
resist,free) and go for 8 or better with room for the 50A.
Bob
|
290.32 | to dry or not? | HIHOSS::HOSSFELD | | Tue Dec 06 1988 12:06 | 26 |
|
I am having troubles with a dryer. I went to turn on the dryer
and when I pushed the start button nothing happened. In the
process of checking I found out that;
the incomming line had 220 across the two hot lines
the ground to one side read 220
the ground to other side read 0
I then checked the dryer plug ground to the ground on a 110
outlet next to in and read no connection. and the 110 ground to
the 2 220 hot lines read 110.
I concluded that the 220 ground had disconnected. The search
went ok back to the elec. box. ( at the other side of the
house). This lead me to find nothing. I went back to the dryer
to check some more. It now works fine and all voltage readings
are as they should be. I traced, jiggled, and bent the wire all
the way back to the elec. box and couldn't reproduce the
problem. This does not make me feel good about the situation.
Any suggestions/help? I want to know that the set up is safe or
fix it to be safe.
Paul H.
|
290.409 | May not be physically possible | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Mon Dec 12 1988 17:40 | 0 |
290.345 | Two wires into one breaker? | ERLANG::BLACK | | Mon Jan 23 1989 14:15 | 27 |
|
I have just run a new lighting circuit from a new breaker box to
a newly finished room in my atic. Somday, I'll finish the rest
of the atic, and will want more lights. It would be quite convenient
to run back to the breaker box for the rest of the lights, but there
is no need for a separate breaker.
Question: in Mass, is it OK to either run two wires into the same
breaker (15A), or to run a pigtail into the breaker and have a wire-nut
splice inside the breaker box enclosure?
If not, is it OK to install a piggy-back pair of breakers, so that
I can use one for each set of lights. (This is new work).
Or else, I'll make sure that I have a live box on that circuit into
which a can connect the rest of the lights at some later date.
Andrew
Before soemone asks me why I don't just use two full-width breakers,
the answer is that the laod doesn't require it (I'm drawing about
3 amps for those lights) and there are only so many slots in the
box. Each electric heat ciruit uses two slots, and I want to keep
some spare capacity.
A
|
290.346 | | HANNAH::DCL | David Larrick | Mon Jan 23 1989 14:37 | 22 |
| > Question: in Mass, is it OK to either run two wires into the same
> breaker (15A), or to run a pigtail into the breaker and have a wire-nut
> splice inside the breaker box enclosure?
I don't know for sure, but two wires under one screw is bad practice if not
actually illegal, and a wire-nut splice inside a breaker box sounds bad to
me too.
> If not, is it OK to install a piggy-back pair of breakers, so that
> I can use one for each set of lights. (This is new work).
Assuming you can find the piggyback breakers, that's what I would do.
Gives you maximum flexibility: allows you to shut off the two runs
independently to work on them, and leaves some capacity for future growth.
> Or else, I'll make sure that I have a live box on that circuit into
> which a can connect the rest of the lights at some later date.
I've done this too; my unfinished basement is festooned with work boxes,
some for this very purpose.
|
290.347 | | MAMIE::THOMS | Ross - 264-6457 | Mon Jan 23 1989 16:01 | 29 |
| >
> Question: in Mass, is it OK to either run two wires into the same
> breaker (15A), or to run a pigtail into the breaker and have a wire-nut
> splice inside the breaker box enclosure?
110-14. Electrical Connections.
(a)Terminals.
"Terminals for more than one conductor and terminals used to connect aluminum
shall be so identified."
If the breaker is designed to handle two conductors and is so marked, you may
attach two conductors. If not wire nut in a third wire and attach to breaker.
> If not, is it OK to install a piggy-back pair of breakers, so that
> I can use one for each set of lights. (This is new work).
>
> Or else, I'll make sure that I have a live box on that circuit into
> which a can connect the rest of the lights at some later date.
>
> Andrew
Why switch lights with circuit breakers? This is definitly Micky Mouse.
Ross
|
290.348 | | MAMIE::THOMS | Ross - 264-6457 | Mon Jan 23 1989 16:26 | 9 |
| I ended my last reply a bit too fast. I mentioned that controlling your attic
lights by the circuit breaker as being Micky Mouse. I should mention your
circuit is most likely against code. Get a code book and read 210-70.
Lighting Outlets Required.
Basically it states that every inhabitable room shall have at least one switch
controlled light or switched outlet for a table lamp. Kitchens and Bathrooms
must have a switched light.
Ross
|
290.349 | Better read it again before you condemn it! | MISFIT::DEEP | Bring out yer dead...(clang!) | Mon Jan 23 1989 18:18 | 4 |
|
Where does it say he's switching the lights on and off with the breaker?
Bob
|
290.350 | | WILKIE::THOMS | Ross - 264-6457 | Mon Jan 23 1989 18:39 | 8 |
| >
> If not, is it OK to install a piggy-back pair of breakers, so that
> I can use one for each set of lights. (This is new work).
I read this as to say that the breaker is the controlling switch. I could be
wrong. Could the author of this note provide more detail.
BTW Bob, What's your interpretation or did you fully read the base note?
Ross
|
290.351 | ...but only Andrew knows for sure... | MISFIT::DEEP | Bring out yer dead...(clang!) | Mon Jan 23 1989 19:40 | 4 |
| My interpretation is that he wanted to leave the extra circuit off until
he was ready to wire in the switches and lights.
Bob
|
290.352 | M I T, B E E, M O U S E | ERLANG::BLACK | | Mon Jan 23 1989 20:35 | 23 |
| Boy, you guys are fast!
First, my name is not micky mouse and I do plan to have regular
light switches too! In fact, the wiring for three switches is in.
The point of my question is that when I wire the other half of the
attic, and add three more switches, I will eventually have to connect
that circuit to the existing one, either at a box, or at the pannel
itself.
I was planning to use a "picky back" breaker, which will, as someone
has already pointed out, give me additional protection in case of
an overload -- only half of the floor will be dark. But I got scared
because I read in this note that such breakers were only allowed
in old work.
I was going to ask the inspector this very question, but he came
and signed off on my rough work and left before I got home. So
now I am still in a quandry.
Are wire nut splices inside the breaker box standard procedure,
or are they regarded as a sign of shoddy work?
Andrew
|
290.353 | | DEMING::HLQAR | | Tue Jan 24 1989 05:46 | 9 |
|
I was under the impression that there are half-width circuit breakers;
i.e., two of them would fit into the same slot as one full-sized
single breaker. Do they exist? Do they have a lower current limit
than a full-sized breaker? Wouldn't they be ideal for this situation
(whether they exist or not)? I seem to remember seeing them in
a circuit panel once upon a time, but it might have been a dream.
Frank
|
290.354 | piggy-back breakers | CTC003::MCCARTHY | We'll beam aboard and stop it. | Tue Jan 24 1989 10:11 | 21 |
| RE: < Note 1849.19 by DEMING::HLQAR >
Some/most manufacturer do make "piggy-back" breakers, you were not
dreaming. In new construction these are a no-no. They come in handy
for cases when only one circuit needs to be added but when several
are needed then either a sub panel should be added or the main
panel replaced/upgraded to higher amperage.
>> Do they have a lower current limit than a full-sized breaker?
They do not/can not provide 220V. If you ment to say AMPS. I have
have seen both 15A and 20A versions.
>>Wouldn't they be ideal for this situation
I don't think the problem here was a lack of space for a new
circuit, .0 just wanted to save space in the box for future use.
I don't think this is good practice. Fill it up then use a
piggy-back if really needed.
bjm
|
290.355 | | WILKIE::THOMS | Ross - 264-6457 | Tue Jan 24 1989 10:48 | 7 |
| There is no code restrictions in using a (dual circuit) breaker. However,
you must be careful in not overloading your feeder panel by using these.
Personally, I don't like them. Why don't you just combine your two lighting
circuits to one breaker? It doesn't sound like much of a load.
BTW, Making wirenut connections in the panel is perfectly acceptable.
Ross
|
290.356 | May not fit | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Tue Jan 24 1989 11:57 | 6 |
| The half width breakers don't always go into a regular panel. The
GE ones I used require a panel that was designed for them, the
connection to the hot bus is different, so you may not be able to
use them in an existing panel.
Eric
|
290.357 | | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Tue Jan 24 1989 13:05 | 6 |
|
Why is there any need to make wire nut conections inside a breaker
box?
CdH
|
290.358 | Here's Two! | CHART::CBUSKY | | Tue Jan 24 1989 13:21 | 11 |
| Re: Why is there any need to make wire nut conections inside a breaker
box?
1. To lengthen a wire that's too short. For example, replacing old
fuse boxes with a new circut breaker panel.
2. To combine two wires into one so that they can be connected to the
same breaker as Ross just described. The wire nut approach is proper
rather than screwing two wires under the same breaker screw.
Charly
|
290.359 | Use two spaces, and cross the piggy back later... | MISFIT::DEEP | Bring out yer dead...(clang!) | Wed Jan 25 1989 19:25 | 18 |
|
I would think that if you were going to run both circuits off the same
breaker, you wouldn't need to run two wires from the panel, but I don't
know your layout.
You have a valid concern about being "left in the dark," and based on
this, I would use two slots in the panel, with the understanding that
if you run out of places in the panel (before running out of "juice"
on the supply side) that these would be good candidates for piggy back
breakers. Cross that one when you get there.
Although the lighting circuit as described doesn't sound likely to
pull enough amps to trip the breaker, its best to have two circuits if
this is the only source of power in the attic. This way, when you
decide you need to run a power tool up there for whatever reason... 8^)
Bob
|
290.360 | Junctions Only in Junction Boxes? | EAGLE1::CAMILLI | | Fri Jan 27 1989 12:45 | 43 |
|
The Guide to the 1984 National Electrical Code (Roland E. Palmquist,
MacMillan, New York, 1986), on page 321 says:
373-8. Enclosures for Switches or Overcurrent Devices - This section
has caused more discussion in the field and left much on the shoulders
of the authority having jurisdiction to make the judgment as to
adequate spaces within enclosures. (See the NEC.) The enclosures
for overcurrent devices and switches may not be used as junction boxes,
auxiliary gutters or raceways, for conductors tapping off or feeding
through to other switches or overcurrent devices. See Figs. 373-2,
373-3, and 373-4.
In italics:
Exception: Where adequate space is provided so that the conductors do
not fill the wiring space at any cross section to more than 40 percent
of the cross-sectional area of the space, and so that the conductors,
splices, and taps do not fill the wiring space at any cross section to
more than 75 percent of the cross-sectional area of the space.
On the next page are the diagrams. The first shows two wires going
to one circuit breaker. The note says "This is a violation".
Another note says "Paralleled conductors are not a violation if
they conform to the requirements for paralleled conductors". The
caption for the figure is "Cabinets and cutout boxes shall not be
used as junction boxes".
The second figure shows a switch box with conduit coming in, splices
or taps going to switches in the box and out through another conduit to
another switch box. The caption is "Improper method of connecting
more than one switch enclosure".
The third figure shows the conduit going into an auxiliary gutter
with the splices, and conduit going to the two switch boxes. The
caption is "Proper manner of connecting more than one switch
enclosure".
The impression I get is that, while you might be able to get away
with putting a splice in the circuit breaker box, your inspector
might well reject it. Why not tap in at a junction box instead?
|
290.361 | Re-read the exception! | WOODRO::THOMS | Ross - 264-6457 | Fri Jan 27 1989 13:18 | 33 |
| >
> Exception: Where adequate space is provided so that the conductors do
> not fill the wiring space at any cross section to more than 40 percent
> of the cross-sectional area of the space, and so that the conductors,
> splices, and taps do not fill the wiring space at any cross section to
> more than 75 percent of the cross-sectional area of the space.
This exception is the key to making wirenut connections in a breaker panel. Just
about every panel manufactured today has adequate space to allow the junctions.
> On the next page are the diagrams. The first shows two wires going
> to one circuit breaker. The note says "This is a violation".
Not quite true. There are breakers manufactured with lugs that are designed to
secure two conductors and are permitted under code 110-14 (a) Terminals.
This statement would be true if the breaker was designed for only one conductor.
> The impression I get is that, while you might be able to get away
> with putting a splice in the circuit breaker box, your inspector
> might well reject it. Why not tap in at a junction box instead?
I haven't had a service panel rejected yet (with wire nut connections). True,
the best way is to minimize junctions in the breaker panel, but a couple
connections are o.k..
Ross
|
290.362 | Nits | EAGLE1::CAMILLI | | Sat Jan 28 1989 12:36 | 36 |
|
RE: < Note 1849.27 by WOODRO::THOMS "Ross - 264-6457" >
I think the author's point was that there is enough slop
in the rule that you might get an inspector who, instead
of figuring out whether you've got the room in the box,
will just say no.
This rule is considerably more ambiguous than, say, the
rule for junction/outlet boxes: each such box has a rating
for the number of wires that can enter (and leave). The
inspector only has to be able to count to determine
if it's legal. If you stuff a breaker box anywhere near
the limit, how is this guy going to figure out the cross
sectional area in every plane? This rule requires either
a lot of effort or a value judgment on the part of the
inspector, so you end up at his mercy.
And, the inspector can always get you with the clause about
"neat and workmanline installation"...
I guess it comes down to the attitude of the installer.
Does he want to do wiring that no inspector could challenge,
does he want something that's just passable, or does he
want to pick a fight with the inspector?
By the way, inclusion of room for two wires on a circuit
breaker does not constitute a legal sanction for running
two circuits from it. (It doesn't exclude the practice,
obviously.) Also, Palmquist mentions that parallel conductors
are legal, which would justify manufacturers putting room
for two wires... Further, a practice being against the
code doesn't prevent a manufacturer from making provision
for such a practice.
|
290.363 | | MAMIE::THOMS | Ross - 264-6457 | Mon Jan 30 1989 11:36 | 21 |
| RE:-1 My last two cents on this topic: Just about every service I've
seen has had at least one splice (branch circuit). In some cases it just
makes sense to splice in the service panel. (For example: ground fault circuit).
I wouldn't recommend making a practice of using the sevice panel as a junction
box, but one or two splices is acceptable and code legal.
> By the way, inclusion of room for two wires on a circuit
> breaker does not constitute a legal sanction for running
> two circuits from it. (It doesn't exclude the practice,
> obviously.) Also, Palmquist mentions that parallel conductors
> are legal, which would justify manufacturers putting room
> for two wires... Further, a practice being against the
> code doesn't prevent a manufacturer from making provision
> for such a practice.
I'm not sure of your point! If a breaker is designed to accomodate
two wires and is so marked, and if the circuit is not overloaded by
splicing in this manner, go for it. This situation is also code legal.
Ross
|
290.365 | Don't go into a breaker panel, but may fit your needs | CTC003::MCCARTHY | We'll beam aboard and stop it. | Tue Jan 31 1989 09:36 | 11 |
|
< Note 1849.30 by SUBSYS::FILGATE "Bruce Filgate dtn 291-7077 ms NKS1-2/H6" >
-< another breaker question, size please? >-
Radio Shack has UL listed breakers that are designed for
use in stereo's, etc that mount in cabnets. You may want to
try this. I have not seen a breaker that goes into a panel
rated under 15A. If they do exist, the cost may be a bit steep.
bjm
|
290.366 | | MAMIE::THOMS | Ross - 264-6457 | Tue Jan 31 1989 10:44 | 12 |
| > try this. I have not seen a breaker that goes into a panel
> rated under 15A. If they do exist, the cost may be a bit steep.
>
> bjm
15 amps is the smallest available for a branch circuit. Read chapter 725
of the NEC (on remote-control, signaling). They talk about overcurrent
protection for different class circuits. (Basically external overcurrent
protection, protected power supplies etc.)
Ross
|
290.367 | Use Tandem breaker | RENFRO::POWELL | Reed Powell HPS Marketing | Tue Jan 31 1989 13:36 | 13 |
| The best example of having a connection inside the box, which is in
almost every box I've seen, is the door-bell transformer, which is
typically mounted on the side fo the box itself, with its 115v leads
sticking into the panel, and connected either to another circuit either
via nuts, or by running a connection to the same breaker screw as the
piggy-backed circuit.
I'd say that if you want to have the most flexibility and the least
potential inspection problem, then just use a tandem breaker. In fact,
if you have a Square-D box, I'll swap you 2 singles for a tandem if you
want!
|
290.368 | Fuse holders will work for 5A | MAKITA::MCCABE | | Fri Feb 03 1989 17:51 | 7 |
| Ref -2
If you really want <15A protection for a circuit, you can buy
a handi-box cover with a fuse socket. They come with an outlet
wired in or just a fuse holder. Screw in a 5A fuse and you are
all set, just use a 1/2" offset to a handi box off the panel.
Chris
|
290.767 | Calibrate the electric meter? | CAABA::KENT | Peter Kent - SASE, 223-1933 | Sun Feb 05 1989 18:17 | 5 |
| Has anyone ever requested the power company come out and calibrate
the meter? I've checked around the neighborhood and I'm using 2X
the amount of power that anyone else is using and I don't think
I have anything so different than the neighbors that it would account
for that much more power used.
|
290.768 | Calibration check | SALEM::M_TAYLOR | I drink alone...Care to join me? | Mon Feb 06 1989 11:23 | 17 |
| Re:.48
Yes, I had mine checked once, in NH (PSNH power), and it was cake.
I had been using alot of power for what I thought I was getting
out of it, so I got Public Service to come over to calibrate it.
The charge was $15, and was refundable if there was a problem, and
theirs if the meter was correct. I watched as the meter was checked,
and saw that there was some error in the power co.'s favor, but
below the threshold where a refund was due me. So it cost me $15.
At least I had some peace of mind. I had already moved out of that
house (as in sold it) but the refund would have applied regardless
of my selling the house.
It took them about 4 days from my request to the actual day of the
calibration.
Mike
|
290.769 | Well, well | SALEM::MOCCIA | | Mon Feb 06 1989 11:34 | 8 |
| Re .48
Are you on a private well? If so, make certain that your well pump
is not operating too frequently. Just before ours died, our monthly
electric bill went from about $35 to $100.
pbm
|
290.770 | Thanks | CAABA::KENT | Peter Kent - SASE, 223-1933 | Mon Feb 06 1989 15:58 | 4 |
| Thanks. Good replies. We do have a well and that's something that
I should check - the house was built in '76 and I don't think the
pump has ever been looked at. I think I'll call the power co. (Hudson
Power and Light) and get them to do the cal.
|
290.771 | Your not alone | FACVAX::NETWORK | Formerly MILVAX::SOTTILE | Tue Feb 07 1989 11:52 | 12 |
|
<-1
our house is serviced by hudson power & light, and over the last
2 years our electric bill has doubled. at the same time our consumption
of electricity has decreased. whats happening? the utility is passing
on their losses in their seabrook investments to the consumer.
last months bill was $92.00. and theres only three people in our
family.
steve
|
290.622 | Upgrading from 60 to 100 amps | ASABET::JMAHON | | Wed Mar 01 1989 20:06 | 9 |
| I would like to update my electrical service from 60 to 100 amps.
Much of the present wire in the house is two conductor, but with
no ground. I need to put in a dryer (220) outlet. Can I update
the wiring in the basement with breakers/100 amp and still use
the existing wire which goes to various lights/plugs in the rest
of the house?
Jack
|
290.623 | TRYING TO HELP | BTO::CHARBONNEA_G | | Wed Mar 01 1989 23:08 | 15 |
| Is your service coming in to your meter rated for 100 amp?
If not in some houses with old wire,you got to rewire and
have the power comp. place 100 amp service to your house.
If you want you can wire only from one breaker to were you
want the dryer,best use number 10 wire with a ground.
Remenber not to add other things to this breaker.(safer this way)
The 100 amp service is done by the power comp.to your meter.
After the meter is up to you in your fuse box.(Breaker)
I use at home for my dryer is 10 ga wire and a 20 amp breaker.
I hope this helps.
GUS
|
290.624 | You MAY want to go for 200 amps | DNEAST::PAULIN_BOB | | Thu Mar 02 1989 09:45 | 21 |
| One of the best things that ever happened to me occured when I asked the
same question about going from 60 to 100 amps.
Fortunately, I had two friends who worked for the local power company,
and they convinced me that the difference in price between 100 and
200 amps would probably be insignificant (It was under $100 for
me in 1976), and I would probably be glad that I upgraded.
As it turned out, just a few years later I built a darkroom in my
cellar and I had enough power to install a small electric baseboard
heater for comfort.
Costs for me were just the additional costs of the 200 amp parts.
Check it out...You MAY want to go for 200 amps if you plan to stay
in the house for any length of time.
Good luck!
Bob Paulin
|
290.625 | JUST A LITTLE INOUT, WATCH OUT!!!!! | FXADM::WYE | | Thu Mar 02 1989 23:46 | 28 |
|
I'm sorry, but I disagree with both .1 and.2, the power company
does not have anything to say what about the number of amps. that
come into ones house, unless your street (Line) carries less then
400 amps) which is un likely. The only thing you have to do is change
your service inside the house, which does not involve the PC, only
an electrican. The cost is quite abit higher than qouted, closer
to $2500. As you stated you do not have a grd. with the two wires.
This will differently cause a problem with the wiring inspector
if you up grade to main to 100/200 amp service. Once you pull a
permit for any!!!! wiring it opens the whole house for inspection.
It is not just for what you pulled the permit for. The inspector
has the run of the house if cares to, here in MA. Your best bet
is buy an Mass. Electrical code book #527 CMR 12.00 which can be
bought most large electrical supply companies or at the following
address.
COMMONWEALTH OF MA.
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY
BOARD OF FIRE PREVENTION REGULATIONS
McCORMACK BUILDING
ONE ASHBURTON PLACE
BOSTON, MA. 02108
THE PRICE IS AROUND $14.00. THIS IS REALLY THE NATIONAL CODE AND
IT APPLIES MOST EVERYWHERE. I GUESS WHAT I'M REALLY SAYING, GO TO
YOUR WIRING INSPECTOR AND FIND OUT WHAT IS REQUIRE IN YOUR TOWN
AND/OR CITY. IF YOU PUT SOMETHING IN WRONG AND SOMETHING HAPPENS
, YOUR INSURANCE WILL NOT COVER IT. I BELIEVE THATS THE BOTTOM LINE,
PROTECTION!!!!
|
290.626 | re .0-.3 | TFH::DONNELLY | Take my advice- Don't listen to me | Fri Mar 03 1989 02:38 | 64 |
| these elec notes usually turn into 3 ring circuses but here's a day gone by
w/only 3 replies! anyway i think i can reply here since i did all this
stuff.
re .0:
> I would like to update my electrical service from 60 to 100 amps....
basically yes.
-------------
re .1:
BTO::CHARBONNEA_G
beware this guy's advice. he asked to get lambasted in another note but
was so far offbase i figured it was a setup (something about not needing
a gfi if you just used 12 gau with a 15 amp breaker). just on elec stuff
maybe.
------
re .2:
> One of the best things that ever happened to me occured when I asked the
...
> and they convinced me that the difference in price between 100 and
> 200 amps would probably be insignificant (It was under $100 for
> me in 1976), and I would probably be glad that I upgraded.
true.
-----
re .3:
> I'm sorry, but I disagree with both .1 and.2, the power company
> does not have anything to say what about the number of amps. that
well they kinda do. i had a VERY old 60 amp line coming from the street
and the power co. came out and told me it was fine for 200 amp. btw, the
power co. only handles to the house, not to the meter (and that cable's not
cheap), and what they do cover is free.
> your service inside the house, which does not involve the PC, only
> an electrican. The cost is quite abit higher than qouted, closer
> to $2500.
the pc does have to tell you where they want the meter, but i guess an
electrician with a brain could figure it out. price is high. i did all
except run the cable from the weatherhead to the new service and it cost
$500. (and they wired it hot, that's why i paid them.)
> As you stated you do not have a grd. with the two wires.
> This will differently cause a problem with the wiring inspector
> if you up grade to main to 100/200 amp service. Once you pull a
> permit for any!!!! wiring it opens the whole house for inspection.
> It is not just for what you pulled the permit for. The inspector
> has the run of the house if cares to, here in MA. Your best bet
this is getting into the code crap here, which is not my bailywick, but...
you can wire a new 200 amp service into old work (even knob and tube) as
long as you size the breakers (like 15 amp) right. trick is, it probably
has to be legal old work.
> is buy an Mass. Electrical code book #527 CMR 12.00 which can be
i went to the library.
craig
|
290.627 | Only $850 | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Mar 03 1989 12:45 | 21 |
| I am not saying the previous replies are wrong, but I had this same
type of thing done last summer. I took an old house (about 88 years
old) that has almost every type of wiring - from knob and tubing
to modern 12 guage - and had the service upgraded from 60amp to
200amp. I paid about $800 or $850. The electric company was
responsible up to the house. The electrician was responsible from
the connection to the breaker panel. I had fuses before.
The electrical inspector only checked out the work done and no other.
He certainly could see other potential difficulties when he when
in the basement, but said nothing. All he cared about was that
the work was done correctly and the ground wire was sufficient for
the service.
This work was in Chelmsford, Massachusetts. I would NEVER pay $2500
for electrical upgrade. I can't believe it would cost that anywhere.
I could be wrong. All I know is mine didn't come anywhere near
that price.
Ed..
|
290.628 | Ditto | CURIE::KAISER | | Fri Mar 03 1989 13:39 | 13 |
|
My experiences are similar to .5.
I went from 30 Amps (try living with that!! :-) ) to 200 Amps.
Cost was $500 for electrician (including permit), plus about $150
to go underground (town requirement); I dug the ditch--I always
keep the fun jobs for myself :-)
Electrical inspector in Wellesley only checked the box in an 80
year old house.
|
290.629 | 550 | RUBY::J_MAHON | | Fri Mar 03 1989 14:41 | 18 |
| I just called and got an estimate of $550 including the permit to
upgrade to 100 amps. I thought about 200 amps but this being an
income property, I decided against it. I do have 200 amps in my
home and I have to say, it leaves you plenty of room for additional
wiring- the breaker panel is about 15" x 30"! The price is not
as bad as I thought. I was going to do the job myself because I
have done a lot of wiring in the past, but time is of the essence
since the new tenants are waiting for a 220 line for their dryer.
Once the new service is done, I'll replace the knob and tube garbage
myself and put in new wiring. In case anyone would like to do the
update to their own home, there is a big display at Grossman's (I
know, a hardware joke shop) which details all the components of
a new 100 amp service and all the connections, etc. right down to
the duplex receptacles. If I decided to do the job myself, I was
going to go down there and take a picture of it...(I still may).
Jack
|
290.630 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | Herb - CSSE VMS SUPPORT at ZK | Fri Mar 03 1989 14:57 | 7 |
| We had our house in Acton Mass, upgraded from 60 to 200 last month. In
addition, electrician ran two new lines, one for our washing machine,
another 220 line for my table saw. He also rewired my table saw motor
from 110 to 220. Total cost $967.00. One man, 6 hours.
p.s. got another estimate that was double that.
|
290.631 | minor digression | AKOV75::LAVIN | Oh, It's a profit deal | Fri Mar 03 1989 15:27 | 8 |
|
> He also rewired my table saw motor from 110 to 220.
BTW - there is usually a little circuit diagram inside the little plate
that covers the wiring connections for the motor that will show you how
to do this fairly easily. Comes in handy if you borrow something like a
compressor that is set up for 110 but keeps popping the breaker -
just change the wires and go with your 220 line.
|
290.632 | | GIAMEM::S_JOHNSON | Buy guns, not butter | Fri Mar 03 1989 16:02 | 14 |
| rep < Note 3067.0 by ASABET::JMAHON >
-< updating question >-
Is it really necessary to upgrade the 60 amp service?
Why not just tap 220/3 wire off the main that goes to your electric range
fuse pull-out, and
run this to a sub panel with a separate 30 amp breaker and then to the
dryer outlet?
Would this be within code?
(Why spend dough if you don't have to)
|
290.633 | Do it right the first time | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Fri Mar 03 1989 17:01 | 10 |
| The implication is that if you have 60 amp service, then the panel
is that size, and possible the wiring from the meter to the panel
is also too small. Any panel has a max size for itslef, exclusive
of the breakers. The main also has a max size. I would suspect that
what you are proposing is against code. 60 amps (or in many cases
even 100 amp) service is too small for today's homes. Spend the
bucks now to have the job done right, and you won't be sorry later
on.
Eric
|
290.634 | two from one is not good | RUBY::J_MAHON | | Fri Mar 03 1989 17:24 | 9 |
| re .10
I inquired into doing something like what you are suggesting. The
problem then becomes, however, that you have two circuits coming
off the same breaker (or in this case fuse block) which, I have
been told, is a no-no. Is this right?
Jack
|
290.635 | Lots of ways to connect two wires | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Fri Mar 03 1989 18:54 | 11 |
| Connecting two wires to the same terminal is probably against code.
But there are breakers (I've got some) that have two terminals per
breaker. And failing that, you can always run one wire from the breaker
to a junction box and split it there. The key rule is that all of the
wires on the circuit must be rated for at least the amperage of the
breaker -- and preferably for the same amperage as the breaker, so that
nobody looks at the wire later and decides that they can plug in a
higher amp breaker, not knowing about the single strand of wire
hidden in a wall somewhere that matches the original breaker rating.
Larry
|
290.636 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | Herb - CSSE VMS SUPPORT at ZK | Fri Mar 03 1989 18:59 | 7 |
| re .10
That's the way our dryer was wired when we bought the house in 1973.
So, maybye the answer to your question is no it isn't really necessary to
upgrade the 60 amp service.
Bottom line is still 60amps. And i'll bet it costs over $100 just to do
that.
|
290.637 | Another experience | ATSE::GOODWIN | | Mon Mar 06 1989 12:17 | 26 |
| We winterized a summer house in Scituate and went from 30-amp 110-only
4-circuit service to 200 amp 220 with 30-some circuits. Cost 1200 or
so. The electrician added some new wiring, but also used all existing
wiring, which was mostly BX, some knob and tube, and some 2-wire 14 ga.
He added GFI's for baths and outside.
The power company had to provide a new wire from the pole to the house
because the old one was 110 only with two wires. They put in larger
wire -- three of them to get the 220. Also had to add a new meter and
lots of lead-in cable.
I would definitely recommend 200-amp. Even if you don't use it all
today, you could in future, and it is a good selling feature. 150 is
almost a minimum nowadays in an average house. I suppose it depends on
whether you have electric heat, range, water heater, A/C, etc.
It really PAYS to shop around and get lots of estimates. We had some
that were double what we paid. It's also good to check references if
you can. At least check with chamber of commerce for complaints. If
you can find an electrician initially by reference rather than from the
phone book you will probably be better off. Ditto all other
contractors. There are some real @#!&%!'s out there taking people's
money and doing shoddy work. In many towns there are various ways to
pass inspections other than the straightforward way -- sad but true.
Above all, trust in your own common sense and people sense to detect
the losers.
|
290.638 | | BOSTON::SWIST | Jim Swist BXO 224-1699 | Mon Mar 06 1989 12:38 | 11 |
| Re: .12
Who said it was against code to connect two wires to the same breaker
terminal? Most breaker terminals have a little clamp plate that
the screw tightens that has grooves for TWO wires. Lacking that,
you can surely connect a single short piece of wire to the breaker
and then immediately to a wire nut which branches to the two wires.
This is not "two circuits on one breaker". It's simply one
radially-wired circuit which is perfectly legal (assuming the total
circuit meets code in all other aspects - wire size/max load/etc).
|
290.639 | | GIAMEM::S_JOHNSON | Buy guns, not butter | Mon Mar 06 1989 15:12 | 23 |
| re .12, .16
Checked with my father in-law (Master Electrician);
Although he couldn't swear that every town electrical inspector
would allow it, he said that two taps off the 220 3wire coming from the
main is perfectly safe, as long as the wire and breakers/fuses are properly
sized. I believe you need 10 gage wire for a dryer ("10-3") and a
30 amp CB/fuse.
So .0, before you run off and spend big bucks on a service upgrade,
if your only extra need is a dryer hook-up, consider a subpanel off your
60 amp service.
The worst thing that can happen is that you pop the main fuses. And this
wouldn't happen unless you were running every appliance and light in the
house.
I'm planning on doing exactly this in an apartment I own that currently
has a washer hook-up but no dryer hook-up.
|
290.640 | exit | RUBY::J_MAHON | | Mon Mar 06 1989 17:00 | 10 |
| re .17
Your advice is well taken; however, when I think about the family
of six (4 kids) living in the house, it is easy to conceive that
*every* electrical device could be on at the same time including
the stove (built-in microwave), dishwasher, disposal, dryer and
furnace. Seems to me the service is no longer adequate...?
/j
|
290.641 | | WMOIS::VAINE | | Tue Mar 07 1989 11:00 | 5 |
| $2500 to do a new service/panel?? My husband must be holding out
on me(he insists I have to work too...)!!!
Lynn
|
290.237 | Buss Bar Blues | ERLANG::BLACK | | Wed Mar 08 1989 02:12 | 28 |
| This looks likethe best note, even after I've waded through the 100 odd
replies on sub-pannels, and the dozen or son on the Mass plumbing laws.
I already have my sub-panel installed. It was done by a professional
electrician. In other words, we paid him.
Now I'm trying to figure out what he has done. The subpannel is an ITE
and looks as though it has eight slots in it -- each bus bar has two
pairs of lugs, and there are eight knockouts in the cover.
I put in four breakers on the right-hand side a couple of months ago --
worked fine. Yesterday, I went to add the remaining circuits and
breakers to the left hand side. The bottom two wouldn't stay in.
Looking closely, I see that the bottom two lugs on the bussbars are
about a quater of an inch shorter than the others, so that the
contacts on the breakers won't fit over them. I can put only six
breakers in the box. Two 240V heater circuits use up four slots;
I want one 15A lighting circuit and three 20A circuits for outlets.
Is this a bug or a feature? Are these bus-bars broken, or are these
lugs missing to make sure that one can only put in six breakers? Or
what?
The pannel is made by ITE. I can't find anyone who sells their stuff.
The breakers are Challenger, which the local electrical supply house
says will fit. And they do, except in the bottom two slots.
|
290.238 | | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Which way to Tahiti? | Wed Mar 08 1989 12:51 | 4 |
|
Why not call the electrician that installed it and ask him? He
probably uses this manufacturer all the time and would know if the
box is bad or if there is something special about those positions.
|
290.239 | | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Wed Mar 08 1989 12:58 | 6 |
| Are you using the same brand breakers as the panel? On some breakers
(not GE manufacturer) for GE panels, though they fit, the contact
to the bus bar sits slightly different. But your best bet initially
is as .114 suggested.
Eric
|
290.240 | ITE Panels | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Wed Mar 08 1989 13:03 | 7 |
| I have an ITE panel and will check the bus when I get home.
Spags sells these panels and breakers.
So does Maynard Supply.
Challenger breakers and (I think) Square D will fit.
Crouse-Hinds will not.
|
290.241 | | SEESAW::PILANT | L. Mark Pilant | Wed Mar 08 1989 15:16 | 23 |
| RE: .113
How many circuits did you tell the electrician you wanted?
What you have is an ITE/Gould 6 circuit box. It is identical with
the 8 circuit box except that the last two circuits are not available.
As you noted, this is done by trimming off the legs on the buss
bars. The only way to fix this is to either get new buss bars (I
don't know if they are available) or to replace the box with a 8
circuit box.
I don't know what the actual reason is behind doing it this way,
but I suspect that there are installations where the folks paying
the bills don't want more than X number of circuits. (It may also
have something to do with sizing the subpanel feed, although that
would be stretching things a bit; since you can put in just about
any size breaker.
BTW, I know all this because I did a similar thing about 7 years
ago when I installed a subpanel in our basement. Silly me...I thought
6 circuits would be enough...sigh.
- Mark
|
290.242 | Yes, I called him | ERLANG::BLACK | | Wed Mar 08 1989 22:08 | 14 |
| Thank you, folks.
By the way, I did call the electrician who installed it. No, he didn't
call back! But our builder did call him. The upshot of the
conversation is that he decided that he would undersize the box
because he had underestimated the cost of the job! He said that he
felt bad about this, since he knew that we needed more than six circuits,
but hadn't made any money on the job and would "think about" sending some
one to fix it!
I'll see if he does before I tell you all his name.
Andrew
|
290.243 | Don't think about it! Let us know his name. | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Which way to Tahiti? | Thu Mar 09 1989 12:51 | 7 |
|
Gee, sounds like this might be suitable cause to take action against
his license? I'd see if you can get him to state in writing what
you found out from the builder.
Let us know how the small claims action turns out! And don't forget
about the better business bureau, too.
|
290.410 | Source for electric meter for sub-panel? | MAMIE::EGHLIMA | | Wed Mar 15 1989 19:00 | 14 |
|
Where can I find a meter for an electrical sub-panel?
I have a house which has an in-law apartment. The in-law apartment has
an 100 Amp electrical sub-panel which is connected to a 200 Amp main
panel. I read someplace (don't remember where) that, there are special
meter for electrical sub-panel which one can install to measure total
electrical usage of the sub-panel.
I would like to know if anybody has used this type of meters, and if so,
how can I get one.
I would appreciate any comments.
|
290.411 | additional meter box | RUBY::J_MAHON | | Thu Mar 16 1989 19:15 | 7 |
| I would install an additional meter box outside of the house between
the 200 amp box and the 100 amp subpanel. The electric company
will supply the meter and then you're all set. Check with an
electrician to see if this is within code. If not, a similar
solution is available, I'm sure.
Jack
|
290.412 | sub-panel meter box | MAMIE::EGHLIMA | | Thu Mar 16 1989 19:48 | 4 |
| I can not install an additional meter box out side of the house
because, house is located in an area which has been zoned for single
family buildings which could have in-law apartment. So my only choice
is to install some kind of meters on the sub-panel.
|
290.413 | | RUBY::J_MAHON | | Fri Mar 17 1989 18:05 | 9 |
| Is there a law against hanging more than one meter on a house zoned
single family? Didn't know about that one, if it does exist.
I'd say your ***t outta luck because I'm sure the electric company
will not install a meter in the basement! They do have to read
the thing... I don't know if the meters or something similar
are available for purchase.
/j
|
290.399 | Ground busbar??? | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Which way to Tahiti? | Fri Mar 17 1989 18:49 | 10 |
|
I have a circuit breaker service panel question(s):
I bought a Crouse-Hinds 100amp service panel at Spags. It has a
neutral bus bar but no ghround bus bar? Where do all the ground
wires for the circuits get connected? To the neutral busbar? And
where does the ground wire to the cold water main get connected?
To the neutral busbar also? Or do I have to buy a seperate busbar?
|
290.414 | | GLASS::CHAPMAN | Jim Chapman DTN 456-5593 | Fri Mar 17 1989 18:52 | 5 |
| We have two meters on the outside of our house. One is the regular
meter and the other is just for the water heater. I can't believe
that this would be illegal regardless of the zoning.
But then again, Your dealing with zoning.
|
290.415 | | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Fri Mar 17 1989 21:23 | 10 |
| I doubt that zoning laws would even mention the meters. The problem
is that a second meter is an indication (not proof) that the premises
may have an apartment. It is the apartment, and not the meter,
that is in violation of the zoning laws.
I suspect there is a typo in .2, and it should have read "zoned
for single family buildings which can not have in-law apartments."
If I'm wrong, then I don't see the problem.
Gary
|
290.400 | panel info | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Sat Mar 18 1989 19:46 | 12 |
| One question you have unanswered about this panel is: are you using
it as a main panel or a subpanel? If its the main panel, then both
the neutral and ground wires connect to the same bussbar, because
that is the one and ONLY place where the ground and neutral are
allowed to be tied together. If its a subpanel, then the neutral
and ground can not be tied together and you will need to buy another
buss bar which will then give you 1 bussbar which is attached to
the case metal for ground and one floating for neutral. The wiring
from the subpanel to the main panel will then carry ground and neutral
independently until they attach back at the main panel.
Eric
|
290.416 | Source for second electric meter | WILKIE::EGHLIMA | | Mon Mar 20 1989 12:01 | 3 |
| There is NO TYPO in .2, and the in-law apartment IS LEGAL.
Thank.....Ali
|
290.401 | | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Which way to Tahiti? | Mon Mar 20 1989 13:13 | 5 |
|
RE: .31
I said service panel and probably should have said main service
panel. Still haven't gotten all the electrical lingo down pat yet...
|
290.419 | Portable Electric Meter? | SHIGEO::SASAKI | Marty Sasaki LTN1-1/D07 226-6011 | Mon Mar 20 1989 16:44 | 8 |
| Is there such a thing as a portable electric meter? I would like
to have something that I could plug into any outlet that would measure
the electricity used by things plugged into it. I could move this
device from room to room and measure the actual electricity used
by various appliances in my home. Something that read directly in
kilowatt hours would be nice.
Marty Sasaki
|
290.420 | PSNH loans them out | MAGIC::COTE | | Mon Mar 20 1989 17:38 | 12 |
| My brother got one from PSNH to see how much juice various appliances
were sucking up. I believe he just called the business office and
they loaned him a box with a meter very similar to what's on the
ourside of the house. The way it worked was you plugged the appliance
into the box and then you plugged the box's power cord into an outlet.
It was sort of an extension cord with a KW meter in it.
It was neat, but didn't really uncover any real secrets. The big
power hog was the frost free refrigerator.
BC
|
290.421 | Radio Shack | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Mon Mar 20 1989 17:43 | 5 |
| Radio Shack sells a clamp on ammeter which has a plug in adapter.
You will then have to do a little math to get watts (or kw) from
the amp readings (watts=volts x amps).
Eric
|
290.422 | Ammeter not enough | SHIGEO::SASAKI | Marty Sasaki LTN1-1/D07 226-6011 | Mon Mar 20 1989 20:19 | 8 |
| The ammeter doesn't quite do the job since I want to plug something
in for a week to get an average usage. When the appliance is a
refrigerator keeping track of the amperage over time is a pain since
the compressor cycles on and off.
I will see whether Boston Edison has meters for loan...
Marty
|
290.423 | Brookstone might still have one | MAKITA::MCCABE | | Mon Mar 20 1989 22:16 | 5 |
| Brookstone used to sell a device that had a little micro processor
in it and you entered the cost per KWA, adjusted for any fuel charge,
and it gave a read out in dollars for any device plugged into it.
Chris
|
290.424 | check your power company | WORDS::DUKE | | Wed Mar 22 1989 14:33 | 20 |
|
Try your power company. They might sell or even give you an
old 2-wire (120v only) meter. If they service some rural
areas they might actually have some around. I suppose you
alway tell them it is for your kids science fair project or
something if they hesitate.
I obtained one from Green Mountain (VT) Power many years ago
for the same purpose you have in mind. I remember having
various things in the house plugged into it, seeing what
portion of the light bill it accounted for.
Good luck,
Peter Duke
PS I still have meter. Last thing it was connected to was
the grow lights in my plant starting box. Costs more
than I thought.
|
290.642 | Yet another opinion | CIM5::TYRA | | Wed Mar 22 1989 21:20 | 20 |
|
To add my 2 cents worth...
We decided to go from 60 to 200 amps in our Boston home last summer.
Of the ten (count 'em, 10) electricians we called, only three were
even willing to come out give us a bid, and only then at 9-10 in
the morning. (Needless to say, I stayed home from work to wait for
these guys....)
To rip out the 60 amp panel, replace it with a 46 slot 200 amp box,
put up a new pole on the outside of the house and add a 220V circuit
for the dryer, the bids came in at $1100, $1680, and $1950. The
house is currently wired in BX cable.
I believe 200 amps was definitely the way to go as we're adding
a new kitchen this next year. But I'm still a little shell-shocked
at the $$ Boston-area electricians extract from their clients....
Paul
|
290.417 | sounds reasonable to me | WORDS::DUKE | | Thu Mar 23 1989 10:18 | 28 |
| I am pretty sure I understand what you are trying to
accomplish. That is, what portion of the total power
comsumption is the apartment? The meter is going in the
feeder for the subpanel. Correct? I see no reason why this
should not be legal. This is not creating multiple services
and such which as I recall in NEC is a problem.
You can buy the meter socket at many electrical supply
places. If you are in southern NH (didn't check node
location), WESCO in Manchester carries them. Not sure of the
price, but I seem to recall $20-30 range.
WESCO as an example is a utility supplier and might also
stock the meter you need. The power company might sell you a
used meter. If you can talk to right person, I'm sure they
will understand your purpose. Might even be able to give
you a used meter.
Since this is in the feeder of a subpanel, there may be a
question on the grounding of the meter socket. I believe
since the meter is normally on the line side of the main
panel, the neutral and ground are common. In this case they
need to be isolated (my understanding of the NEC). Not sure
if the meter sockets are designed to do this.
Peter Duke
|
290.643 | 200A Main to a 100A box questions | RAMBLR::MORONEY | I survived... | Fri May 26 1989 00:08 | 11 |
| I just bought a house in which the 60 amp - 100 amp upgrade is half done.
The electric box is a new breaker box, with a 100A main breaker, yet the
meter and the main cable is the old 60A stuff. I'm wondering if I can
put 200 amps in instead. Does the box have a current rating itself, or
can I have 200A main cable put in and replace the main breaker with a
200A breaker?
If the box itself has a 100A rating, should I run 200A cable to the 100A
breaker, so if "someday" I need the 200A, I can just replace the box?
-Mike
|
290.644 | | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Fri May 26 1989 12:27 | 6 |
| The box does have a rating, which is printed on the label inside the
box, so just take a look. To wire from the box to the meter will re-
quire the meter to be pulled, so that circuit is dead and you have
access to the connections within the meter box.
Eric
|
290.645 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | I survived... | Fri May 26 1989 13:46 | 8 |
| re .22:
Thanks. I'll check for a rating on the box tonight. The 60A line from the
street to the box is in poor shape so it has to be replaced fairly soon. I
believe the meter and its box need to be replaced as well. The question is
100A or 200A cable.
-Mike
|
290.646 | | ARGUS::RICHARD | | Fri May 26 1989 14:29 | 17 |
| If you're sticking with the 100 amp service box, then you probably
won't upgrade to 200 amps for a very long time. By the time you
do upgrade, you'll probably want new cables as well. I just upgraded
my service last year. Went from 100 amp fuses to 200 amp breakers.
The old service was at least 30 yrs. old and the cables were going
at the connection to the wires that run to the telephone poll.
The house is a single family that was a 5 room ranch, and expanded
to 7 rooms, 2 baths. (Basement rooms not included.) It's not that
we use a lot of electricity, but with the number of appliances we
do have, it's nice to never run short of electrical outlets or lights.
Our microwave/convection oven for example, eats enough electricity
to be on it's own service. And it's also a good idea to keep the
fridge on it's own too. Not forgeting to mention other appliances
that draw a lot such as air conditioners, de-humidifiers, etc.
With the 100 amp, I was running out of my expansion needs. While
now with the 200 amp, never.
|
290.33 | Power cut back? | HBO::CALCAGNI | A.F.F.A | Mon Jun 12 1989 14:07 | 16 |
|
This might go here?
Over the past several weeks I've noticed that whenever a load is
put on my Electricty the lights dim and flicker.
When the washing machine runs they flicker. whole house?
The iron, refridge, hair dryer, and so on.
This never happened before, and I've made no changes to anything
that could possibly have caused this to happen.
Strange??
Cal.
|
290.34 | | MAMIE::DCOX | | Mon Jun 12 1989 17:22 | 14 |
| I had a similar problem. When hurricane Gloria blew over, it caused a tree to
bend quite a ways and snapped the braided neutral from the power line to the
house. It caused some very wierd symptoms. Point is, when PSNH replaced the
lines, the problem went away. The repair foreman speculated that a branch had
been rubbing against the neutral for quite a while, actually wearing it away -
you could see that the break was not a clean snap. Since then, we do not have
flicker problems when appliances come on.
You might want to look at the three lines coming in as well as making sure the
neutral is SOLIDLY grounded to earth just outside the house and near the
entrance box.
Dave
|
290.35 | Some things to look at (and a question) | REGENT::GETTYS | Bob Gettys N1BRM 235-8285 | Mon Jun 12 1989 19:42 | 29 |
| First a question - Do the lights always DIM or do some
dim and others flare (get brighter)?
If they always dim, then you have developed a high
(comparitavely) resistance connection in the supply line. This
could be in many places depending. If only some dim, then it is
probably in the line from your fuse box to the appliance
(probably not this in your case). If they "all" dim, then check
the connections from the fuse box out to the meter and at the
pole (obviously you can't do all of these yourself).
If you do get some flare, then it is most likely in the
neutral. Again, check from the fuse box back to the pole, but
the neutral is the culprit (it won't hurt to check the hot ones
at the same time). One more thing to check - the ground wire
going from your fuse box to your local ground (usually a water
pipe - sometimes a ground rod). If fixing this fixes your
problem - YOU STILL HAVE A PROBLEM!!! You have a neutral problem
as described and the repaired ground is just hiding it. It still
MUST be fixed.
After you have checked and eliminated what you can do
yourself, most power companies will come out and look at the
situation for you and they can do the stuff you can't.
REMEMBER - with the fuse box open (cover removed) there
are wires that are ALWAYS!! hot. BE CAREFUL!
/s/ Bob
|
290.36 | | GIAMEM::S_JOHNSON | Buy guns, not butter | Tue Jun 13 1989 14:43 | 10 |
| > at the same time). One more thing to check - the ground wire
> going from your fuse box to your local ground (usually a water
> pipe - sometimes a ground rod). If fixing this fixes your
A word of caution on ground wires- disconnect the main before
removing the ground wire from the ground (earth or pipe)!
Steve
|
290.37 | All fixed now. | ESPN::CALCAGNI | A.F.F.A | Tue Jun 13 1989 23:26 | 15 |
|
I did a check of the wires around my Fuse (Breaker box) and a visual
check outside the house. To my untrained eyes.. ziltch.
I called the electric company and they came right over. He said
it doesn't sound like a netrual wire but possibly a weak connector.
He went up and changed a few connections and did find a bad one
that was loose and getting worse. I guess it would've failed
completely soon.
Anyway another Thanks to Notes!!
Cal.
|
290.841 | Note relocation! | MFGMEM::MICHAUD | Think about software that thinks! | Mon Oct 02 1989 18:21 | 44 |
| <<< JOET::DUA1:[000000.NOTES$LIBRARY]HOME_WORK.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Better living through DIY >-
================================================================================
Note 3514.0 Singing microwave breaker :^( 2 replies
MFGMEM::MICHAUD "Think about software that thinks!" 16 lines 2-OCT-1989 13:31
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Can someone tell me what is wrong here? I replaced my stove hood with
a under_the_counter microwave which is rated at 625 watts. All that
was in the hood was a two speed fan and a light. When I use the micro
wave, the breaker for it hums. I read the notes in 1145 and it sounds
similar. My question is: Do I need a dedicated circuit for the
microwave oven? It came with a regular plug. If I replace the circuit
breaker with a 20a breaker and any outlets along the way (or could I
just keep the other breakers as they are) will I be ok? I believe the
unit is drawing up to the max of the breaker. BTW the fan hood was
wired directly (no outlet) so I connected the microwave to that. Seemed
logical at the time because it had your ordinary 120v plug hanging off
of it.
thanks
John
<<< JOET::DUA1:[000000.NOTES$LIBRARY]HOME_WORK.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Better living through DIY >-
================================================================================
Note 3514.1 Singing microwave breaker :^( 1 of 2
TEKVAX::KOPEC "I'm not." 15 lines 2-OCT-1989 13:42
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.) if the breaker is less than 20 amps now, don't put a 20 amp
in until you verify that all the wire on the circuit is 12 gauge.
2.) Often breakers sing because they have a loose connection
either to the wire or to the bus bar. With the juice off, wiggle
the breaker and retighten the wire connection.
3.) a dedicated circuit isn't strictly necessary, but it's sure
nice. If we have the microwave running and plug the vacuum cleaner
into the wrong outlets, neither the vacuuming nor the cooking gets
done. A nice separate 20 amp (12 gauge) circuit also gives you less
voltage drop than a 14 gauge circuit that goes through several
connections on the way to heating your lunch.
...tom
|
290.425 | Breakers/BusBar Burning up | SSDEVO::M_HERMAN | | Wed Oct 11 1989 14:37 | 28 |
|
My name is Mike Herman and I am very new to the notes file so
bear with me in case of mistakes. I live in Colorado Springs and my
house was built in 1970. I have been having problems with my circuit
breakers "heating up". That is at the point of where they push down
onto the main bus bar in the circuit box they are getting charred
and eventually needing replaced. This in turn makes my lights flicker
sometimes. At first I said it was just that the breakers were old
and since my breaker box is outside I also contributed some weather
conditions to it. But now even ones I have recently replaced are
heating up. I have also noticed that my main bus bar, where these
breakers are heating up, is "disappearing". It appears that there
is arching going on and it destroys that part of the bus bar, but is it
not true that in order for arching to happen there has to be a
diffrence of potential. If I wiggle the breaker I can hear what I
think is arching. This has happened on both 15 and 20 amp breakers.
Questions????
1. If I am drawing too much current why are the breakers not popping?
2. If there is arching where is the diffrence of potential?
3. Why are the breakers burning up in such a short amount of time?
4. What the hec is going on?????
Any info or input would be greatly appreciated.....
Restless Sleeper
Mike
|
290.426 | Do something before you burn something down | RAMBLR::MORONEY | How do you get this car out of second gear? | Wed Oct 11 1989 14:56 | 19 |
| Since you say the box is outside, the buss bars and the breaker connections
corrode, and therefore form poor contacts.
You also say the buss bars are being eaten away. This worsens the situation,
since this doesn't allow as good contacts.
Another possibility is you have the wrong type breaker for the box. They may
"fit", but not properly.
Another possibility is the current capacity of the box (the buss bars) itself.
You may have a 100A box, with a 200A main breaker drawing over 100A of current.
You will probably have to replace the buss bars and any questionable breakers.
Better yet, mount a new box INSIDE.
There is some stuff that you can use on the contacts that resists corrosion.
If that's all you do, it's probably just a band-aid solution.
-Mike
|
290.427 | Replace it Now. | BOXTOP::SIRIANOS | | Wed Oct 11 1989 15:35 | 4 |
| I agree with the first reply, problem is probably caused by corrosion.
My opinion, have an electrician replace that panel IMMEDIATELY.
For your own safety! Any or all of the fore mentioned causes could
be the problem, but still the panel is now junk.
|
290.428 | Check for conduit leaks | CSCMA::LEMIEUX | | Wed Oct 11 1989 16:05 | 21 |
| Hi,
The previous replys are correct, lack of good contact is the
obvious cause, and corrosion is the most likely culprit causing
the contact problem. There is quite possibly, moisture getting into
the panel through the conduit connections or the weatherhead at
the top of the riser. Best to be sure the leaks are fixed or no
matter how many times you change the panel or bus bars, the problem
will re-occur.
It is common practice in Colorado to install the panelboard
on the exterior of the building, quite often it is a requirement
by the utility, and can be done without any problems if the electrician
pays attention to detail while doing the install.
Good luck!
ps. I have had to replace a few panels in the past, and found
that leaking was by far the most common cause of the problem.
|
290.429 | Cost for new panel installed | SSDEVO::M_HERMAN | | Wed Oct 11 1989 18:15 | 5 |
|
Can you give me a close estimate of what replacing the panel is
going to or should cost??????
Mike
|
290.430 | I just did it. | GIAMEM::LAMPROS | Bill Lampros | Thu Oct 12 1989 12:00 | 4 |
| I just had my panel replaced by an electrician. Remove 100 amp,
20 position circuit breaker panel and replace with 150 amp, 36 position
circuit breakers.
Cost $490
|
290.431 | Thanks!! | SSDEVO::M_HERMAN | | Thu Oct 12 1989 13:43 | 7 |
|
Thanks for all of the help and info everyone. I was afraid that
this was going to be a major ordeal!! Thanks again everyone!! I have
been reading the notes file for a few days and I have already learned
a great deal!!!!
Mike
|
290.432 | Go for 200 amps! | RAVEN1::RICE_J | This space for rent cheap! | Thu Oct 12 1989 20:04 | 6 |
| I'm sure the author of .5 had his reasons, but if I were doing a
panel replacement I would go for a minimum of 200 amp service.
The incremental cost would be negligible and you would have service
that is the minimum for new house construction.
Jim
|
290.433 | Get many quotes | OASS::B_RAMSEY | half a bubble off plumb | Thu Oct 12 1989 20:32 | 21 |
| re .7
The incremental cost is negligible. I recently had my 60 amp service
replaced with a 150 amp service. We had 8 quotes and they all said
the cost was the same for 150 or 200. Except 1 company which would
do a 150 for $300 less. Since we plan on selling the house within
the next year and we needed to spend the money on other repairs,
we went with 150.
We had a new mast, a new meter box and a new fuse box. The mast
and meter box had to be moved because of new codes in our area.
The cost for the job was $1235. The electrician said the difference
in price is the cost of the actual box, the main switch, and the
wire/cable that runs from the meter to the box.
Review your needs and ask for a cost for both 150 and 200 amps.
In most cases, the 200 service is a better buy because of the 1)
the ability to handle more power needs now and in the future and
2)the selling feature.
|
290.434 | conduit or cable | NYEM1::MILBERG | Barry Milberg | Thu Oct 12 1989 23:35 | 12 |
| There is also a difference in the cost between service cable and
conduit from the service head (where the power company hooks in).
My electrician preferrred conduit and copper cables and the extra
cost was about $100. It also looks better with the conduit then
the cable IMHO.
Total cost for a 200 amp changeover here in NJ (including permit)
with conduit and a 40 position panel was less than $1000.
-Barry-
|
290.435 | *MAIN* Electric Supply Repair Story | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Thu Nov 09 1989 13:29 | 285 |
|
From: HANNAH::LEICHTERJ "Jerry Leichter 08-Nov-1989 2237"
If you don't care about megawatts, bus bars bigger than your wrist, things
that cause ground loops out to Hawaii, or big hairy construction projects,
then skip this message.---peo
Through several layers of indirection comes this interesting tale of
engineering in the large.
Date: Wed, 27 Sep 89 10:27 PDT
>From: Thomas L. Mc Mahon <tlm@WHITE.SWW.Symbolics.COM>
Subject: Cuts and jumpers (on a different scale)
- ---
Several days ago a very large number of trucks and men from the Los
Angeles Department of Water and Power descended on my neighborhood.
They removed large sections of Pershing drive to a depth of 15 feet or
so over a stretch of about a city block. I assumed they had a problem
with a water main or something.
When they started building semi-permanent structures over the holes I
knew something really big was up. When the large trucks full of
strange power tools, mega-welding machines, breathing equipment, and
racks of test equipment came I started wondering. Driving by a couple
nights ago (11 PM), I noticed that the pace hadn't slowed - they were
at it 24 hours a day.
My curiosity got the best of me yesterday when they brought in the
giant tanks full of liquid nitrogen. LN-2 for the DWP? I parked my
car and played the lookie loo.
It turns out they have a problem with an underground wire. Not just
any wire but a 230 KV, many-hundred-amp, 10 mile long coax cable. It
shorted out. (Lotta watts!) It feeds (fed) power from the
Scattergood Steam Plant in El Segundo to a distribution center near
Bundy and S.M. Blvd.
To complicate matters the cable consists of a copper center conductor
living inside a 16 inch diameter pipe filled with a pressurized oil
dielectric. Hundreds of thousands of gallons live in the entire
length of pipe. Finding the fault was hard enough. But having found
it they still have a serious problem. They can't afford to drain the
whole pipeline - the old oil (contaminated by temporary storage) would
have to be disposed of and replaced with new (pure) stuff which they
claim takes months to order (in that volume). The cost of oil
replacement would be gigantic given that it is special stuff. They
also claimed the down time is costing the costing LA $13,000 per hour.
How to fix it and fast?
That's where the LN-2 comes in. An elegant solution if you ask me.
They dig holes on both sides (20-30 feet each way) of the fault, wrap
the pipe with giant (asbestos-looking) blankets filled with all kind
of tubes and wires, feed LN-2 through the tubes, and 1freeze0 the
oil. Viola! Programmable plugs! The faulty section is drained,
sliced, the bad stuff removed, replaced, welded back together, topped
off, and the plugs are thawed. I was amazed.
- ------
The next day:
Last night the DWP held a curbside chat to allay the neighborhood's
fears that they were going to accidentally blow us all up. Apparently
all the vapor clouds from all the LN-2 blowoff had caused a great deal
of concern.
Interesting bits:
The feeder was laid 17 years ago and was designed to have an MTBF of
60 years. There are other similar feeders in use around California,
in the Pacific North West, and some on the east coast. This was the
first failure in the western US. No one out here had any idea how to
fix it so they brought in experts from the east. (NYC has had some
faults.)
This link is a very critical part of the LA power grid. Last night
the city engineers verified the $13,000 per hour power cost figure
quoted the day before. (I guess that means they are being forced to
buy power off the grid somewhere else.)
There are actually three center conductors (they had a cross sectional
model to show us). Each is about 3" in diameter with a one inch solid
copper core. Each is wrapped with hundreds of layers of a special
paper. That, in turn, is sheathed with copper and then each one is
spiral-wrapped its entire segment-length with a 1/4 inch bronze
"wire". The three conductors are then twisted together during the
pulling process. The bronze spiral wraps form a kind of linear
bushing with minimal contact area with the inside of the pipe so it's
"easy" to pull each segment. Ha.
Each of the three legs in the feeder carrys 600-800 Amps (depending on
demand) of 230KV three phase power. The ground return is the Santa
Monica Bay. Down at the Scattergood Steam Plant and up in Santa
Monica they have a giant copper anchors out in the bay.
They lay these things in 2000 foot segments. 2000' is the longest
segment they can pull through the steel pipe. The pipe is laid first
and then the internal cable(s) are pulled through. Tensile forces
must be enormous. At each segment joint (splice) there is a very
large and expensive ($100K) underground vault. Future technology may
allow them to go 3000 feet, reducing the number of vaults needed per
run, thereby saving money.
After the feeder was originally built (and the cable pulled) it was
thoroughly evacuated to both leak test and remove any contaminants.
It was flushed with dry nitrogen and then reevacuated. Golden Bear
High Tension Oil was then slowly added while still maintaining a
vacuum so as to "pull" any residual gas contaminants out of the oil
and the cables in the pipe. The pipe, full of oil, is then
pressurized to about 200 PSI for some period of time before it gets
powered up. 200 PSI is maintained during operation to keep any
bubbles from forming and to drive insulating oil into the paper.
At both ends of the pipeline they have 6000 gallon tanks of Golden
Bear lightly pressurized under a blanket of dry nitrogen. There are
pumps at both ends. There is about 100K gallons in the entire
pipeline, not including the 6K gal tanks. Every six hours they
reverse the pumps so the oil oscillates back and forth in the pipe.
The pumps only run at 3 gallons per minute but that is enough, over 6
hours, to get the oil in each 2000 foot segment to go at least a
segment or two length in either direction. This eliminates hot spots
in the copper conductors and spreads the heat out over several
thousand feet. A little competitive pressure is always maintained
between the pumps to get the 200 PSI.
They learned the hard way that you simply don't reverse the pumps lest
you get the Golden Bear equivalent of water hammer. The last hour of
every 6 hour cycle is spent slowly reducing the oil velocity down to
zero before you reverse it and then slowly ramp back up in the other
direction.
Inbetween segments, in the vaults, are temperature sensors embedded in
the pipe. These monitor the oil temperature. These are wired to a
computer downtown. Because the oil oscillates, the DWP can track the
temperature gradient along the pipe and get an early indication of the
location of any hot spot problems. They have regularly spaced flow
rate and pressure monitors for the same purpose - detecting and
isolating faults.
Every vault also has a nipple which allows sampling of the pipe oil.
They said you withdraw the oil through a thick membrane with a syringe
(?). This happens monthly on all feeders in the LA area. The samples
are analyzed downtown by a staff of chemists who can relate the
presence of things like acetylene, butane, and benzene in the oil to
arcing, coronas, and so forth. Apparently the oil chemistry is a very
good indicator of the health of the segments.
One of their worst fears, after they open up the pipe, is having a
blowout of the freeze plugs. If they ever run out of nitrogen during
the repair process they'll lose one side of the pipe (or both). Right
now they the pipe each side of the fault dropped down to 80 PSI. They
are afraid that if they go any lower in oil pressure any gas in the
oil will come out of solution and cause an explosive expansion. Not
only that, but since there is so much oil embedded in the paper
insulation, any sort of gas bubbling (oil foaming) would shred the
insulation, rendering the entire feeder useless. They say it could
take months to safely let the pressure off to zero. (That is the
other reason ($13k/hr) they cannot afford to drain the whole pipe.)
Even at 80 PSI, if they lose a freeze plug they will have a really big
mess outside the pipeline. The holes they've dug cannot hold 100K
gallons and they're operating on a hill near the beach anyway... (Big
pollution threat for LA basin.) Potentially fatal for anyone around.
Right now they have LN-2 companies on call from San Diego to San
Francisco with contingency plans of all sorts in case there is a major
traffic problem with trucks getting in.
They say the repair could take weeks or more, depending on what they
find when they get inside. They believe the cause of the fault was
the inner conductors slipping downhill inside the pipe and shorting
against a metal flange. Even if that's true they wonder where it
slipped to, and hence, where it may be bunched up down hill.
Finding the fault was a problem in itself. Since this was all new to
them they really didn't know how to start. They tried time-domain
reflectometry equipment but got inconclusive information. They tried
ultrasound and radar but that didn't work. Then they got a thing
called a "thumper" shipped in which got them pretty close. The
thumper sends mondo-amp pulses into one end of the cable. The
electromotive force tends to cause physical displacement of the
conductors which you can hear from the street level. The place where
the clicking stops is where the problem usually is. This got them to
the defective segment.
What pinpointed the problem in the end was a bunch of car batteries
and some millivoltmeters. (From one technology extreme to the other.)
They hooked up car batteries to both ends, tapped the cable at several
points (maybe there are taps in the vaults?) and, knowing the drops
and resistance of the cable, got within a few feet of the fault. (I
used to use the exact same technique on memory boards.)
Next came the X-Ray equipment. Sure enough, they can see the cable
shorting against the steel wall of the pipe.
Once all of the repair is done they still have to close it up. How do
you weld a steel pipe with paper insulation inside? Slowly. They
have special heliarc welding equipment and "certified operators" who
take 8 hours to weld around one cross section of pipe. They are
required to keep their hand on the pipe no more than 3 inches from the
tip of the welder. If it is too hot for their hand they stop and let
it cool. After all, they can't afford another failure.
- ------
Oct 20, 1989 Update
I am getting all of these bits from a guy named Jim who is the project
manager. He looks kinda like a red neck RWK (Jesus in a hard hat with
a Harley belt buckle). [RWK is Bob Kerns, an ex-Symbolics person,
6'7" tall, skinny, bearded. -- DLW] He is a really great guy. Jim was
one of the splicers on the project 17 years ago when he was working
his way through school. He is a now professional electrical and
mechanical engineer. After having worked his way up through the ranks
at the DWP he is now The Big Boss. He claims to be having the time of
his life - back in the field with one of the biggest challenges of his
career. If we ever recruit a VP of engineering I would hope its
someone like him.
So, what went wrong? Varying load conditions in the three legs of the
3-phase circuit caused tremendously strong and dynamic magnetic field
changes. The electromagnetic forces between the three conductors and
the steel pipe (gack!) cause the conduit to wiggle around inside the
pipe. Over many years (and under the influence of gravity) the thing
slipped and wiggled every which way. Also, due to very slight
diametric temperature gradients, the differential thermal expansion of
a cable that big across causes bending and warping forces. Nobody
ever thought of any of this.
Wiggle alone may not have cause the problem, however. The spices
between cable segments are much larger in diameter than the cable
itself. The steel pipe at these points is much larger than the main
run. So the whole affair get fat and then shrinks down every 2000
feet or so. What really screwed them was failure to put any sort of
clamp at the splices to keep the fat splice from getting pulled into
the narrower main runs. This is what cause the fault.
Jim says the fault lasted 20 milliseconds before breakers tripped.
(The breakers for a wire like this are pretty amazing in their own
right. They use high pressure gas to blow out the arc as the circuit
begins to open. Anything that can cut off this number of megawatts in
20 ms gets my respect.) It blew carbonized oil about 3000 feet down
the pipe to either side of the fault. (Compute velocity...)
They will be removing a long length of cable from the faulted area for
analysis. The entire length will be dissected. Jim says the
insulation they have inspected at so far looks like shredded
cauliflower due to the explosion from the fault and the gas bubbling
in it. (BTW - The insulation consists of 118 layers of paper tape.)
Based on X ray imaging they are going to have to open up 14 of the 23
splices along the 10 mile run. They'll have to drain the pipe to do
so. It will take them 2 months to take the pipeline down
(depressurize and drain). (The oil will be recycled - see below.) At
each of the opened splices they are going to install special aluminum
(non magnetic) collars around the conductors to keep the splices from
getting pulled into the necked-down section of the pipe. These
collars are being specially fabricated now and will be ready in about
a month.
At each splice they have to build a semi clean room to keep dirt, moisture,
worker sweat, and any other contaminants out of the joint before closing.
After all, we're talking a quarter megavolt! They have special air
conditioning and filter units for the vaults. Each joint will take two
months of work. They will get some degree of parallelism in the phase of
the project.
After repairing and replacing the faulted section of cable,
stabilizing all of the splices, and buttoning it all up comes the job
of putting the oil back in. First the pipe is evacuated and then
back-filled with nitrogen etc as I described earlier. After extensive
filtering, the oil is heated to about 230 degrees farenheit. It gets
injected into a vacuum chamber at the temperature thorough hundreds of
spray nozzles. This gets the maximum possible surface area so all the
crap in it boils out into the chamber. The good stuff that's left is
collected and pumped immediately into one end of the pipeline.
Then they power it up and see if it works. If not, they start over
again. I'll keep you posted.
------- End of Forwarded Message
|
290.436 | sort of puts a box of romex into perspective | BCSE::YANKES | | Thu Nov 09 1989 15:36 | 4 |
|
Absolutely amazing. Thanks for putting that in here!
-craig
|
290.437 | fascinating | RAMBLR::MORONEY | How do you get this car out of second gear? | Thu Nov 09 1989 16:34 | 4 |
| I think the folks in ELECTRO_HOBBY might get a kick out of this as well. You
may want to post this there, too.
-Mike
|
290.438 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Thu Nov 09 1989 16:53 | 8 |
| RE: .1
You're welcome. I got quite a kick out of it.
Re: .2
You're welcome to post it there, or tell me which node it's on and
I'll cross post it.
--David
|
290.439 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | Pat Pending | Thu Nov 09 1989 17:36 | 7 |
| I hope those guys are licensed and have a permit.
:-)
(I thoroughly enjoyed .0.)
ed
|
290.440 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | How do you get this car out of second gear? | Thu Nov 09 1989 18:07 | 7 |
| ELECTRO_HOBBY is at OVDVAX::ELECTRO_HOBBY. I'll post .0 there if you haven't
beaten me to it the next time I read the conference.
Reading .0 explains why electric co's are willing to pay the $$$$ it must cost
for the real estate and pylons the overhead wiring they usually use needs...
-Mike
|
290.441 | | TOOK::SWIST | Jim Swist LKG2-2/T2 DTN 226-7102 | Fri Nov 10 1989 12:16 | 7 |
| You don't have to even go to megawatts to transition to a whole new
world of electrical equipment.
I watched them build the electrical supply room in ZK3. I didn't
recognize a SINGLE component that I could buy in the electrical aisle
at Somerville Lumber.
:-)
|
290.442 | Aren't meltdowns fun... | SEESAW::PILANT | L. Mark Pilant, VMS Security | Fri Nov 10 1989 13:05 | 9 |
| .0 reminds me of the time I helped fix a 1600 amp buss-bar melt down at
me previous job. It was real interesting to watch the phases of the
bar short out to ground. Managed to blow the transformer supplying the
building also.
Something about Aluminum and Copper oxidizing and generating heat when
you pass electricity through the increasing resistance joint :-}
- Mark
|
290.443 | | ELWOOD::LANE | | Fri Nov 10 1989 13:53 | 6 |
| Excellent story. Reminds me of the time I was working on converted T2 tanker
NASA was using as a tracking platform in the early/mid 70's. Oil => steam =>
turbines => generators => 3600 v./3 ph. @ about 3k amps => one *large* motor.
The copper conductors were wrapped with one layer of black electrical tape.
When I was getting a tour of the engine room, the chief electrician pointed to
the copper bars and said "Don't touch those".
|
290.38 | Fire alarm trigger by switch. Why? | SALEM::HO | | Thu Nov 30 1989 18:49 | 21 |
|
I have a new addition put in and the electrician put in a 60 amp
subpanel in the new addition. There are two problems that I am having
and would like some idea of what cause it and how to get it fixed.
1. After all the wirings were connected (including the fire alarm)
Two switches in the basement, which both has flouresant (sp) fixture,
occasionally trigger the fire alarm. It happens when either switch is
turning on or off. The alarm got trigger durring the flipping of
the switch - just a brief beep. It doesn't happen all the time.
Why and what could be the cause.
2. The circuit for the bedroom is 15 amps. When I put in approximately
1600 W. (e.g. a 1500 watts quartz heater and a few lights) the circuit
pops. The electician say I am putting too much wattage on. I have
use the same heater in the old side of the house where 15 amp circuit
is and no problem. If there something wrong with the wiring??
Thanks for any advice you all can give me.
Kin
|
290.39 | Loaded circuit | GENRAL::BALDRIDGE | Fall has fell | Fri Dec 01 1989 13:50 | 8 |
| re: .28 ref 1. I don't know how the fire alarm works. You need to
describe now. (Smoke alarm?)
ref 2. 1600 watts divided by 110 volts = 14.545454 amps. Most circuit
breakers are only accurate to about +/- 5%. Too much on the circuit!
Chuck
|
290.40 | | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Fri Dec 01 1989 14:14 | 6 |
|
And if your line voltage sags down to 105 volts you're at 15.2 and over
the breaker's steady state rating.
CdH
|
290.41 | Yes, overloaded | LATOUR::DZIEDZIC | | Fri Dec 01 1989 14:14 | 13 |
| Re .28/.29
"Nominal" (RMS) line voltage is 117 volts, not 110, not 120.
That drops the current down to 13.7 amps (more or less). If
you plugged the loads directly into a breaker, then you could
reasonably expect to get 15 amps from that branch circuit.
However, since you have some length of wire running from the
breaker to the outlet(s) and light(s), there will be some
amount of voltage drop in the wires to the device(s). This
will result in less than 15 amps available to "distant"
devices on that branch circuit. As .29 said, probably too
great a load, but not as based on those calculations using
110 volts.
|
290.42 | | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Fri Dec 01 1989 14:23 | 7 |
|
You might get greater than normal voltage sag in the addition,
depending on how far the subpanel is away from the service entrance.
This also works against you.
CdH
|
290.43 | Other possibilities | LATOUR::DZIEDZIC | | Fri Dec 01 1989 14:38 | 3 |
| And, of course, let's not forget the possibility of loose
terminal screws on the outlets (or "push-in" wiring), both
of which can contribute to this type of problem.
|
290.44 | Why not 20amp? | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-02/Y05 -- dtn 381-2684 | Fri Dec 01 1989 15:59 | 5 |
| If I understand correctly this is a NEW circuit in a NEW bathroom.
If so, why was it wired with only a 15 amp circuit? With the types
of appliances avaialable today and the likely loads they will
impose I would need a good reason to install a 15 amp circuit
rather than a 20 amp. 20 amps is well worth the small added cost.
|
290.45 | Get a smaller heater | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-02/Y05 -- dtn 381-2684 | Fri Dec 01 1989 16:02 | 10 |
| To follow up on my previous reply, DO NOT simply replace the
existing 15 amp breaker with a 20 amp breaker. This could be done
if you knew for sure that all the wiring in that circuit was heavy
enough, but if it was there'd probably have been a 20 amp breaker
installed too.
It seems to me that you easiest solution is to get a smaller
heater -- 1000-1250 watts or so.
|
290.46 | Old traditions die hard | VINO::DZIEDZIC | | Fri Dec 01 1989 16:04 | 10 |
| Probably because most electricians still believe 15 amp branch
circuits are sufficient in areas where the Code doesn't specifically
require a 20 amp branch circuit. I've heard arguments for 20 amp
branch circuits for at least ten years now, but it still seems
15 amp is the defacto standard. Of course, you need to use
different receptacles and switches with 20 amp circuits, since
the common ones are only rated at 15 amps.
Moral is, if you want 20 amp, you'll probably have to specify
it when you contract for the job.
|
290.47 | | MAMIE::THOMS | Ross @285-3151 | Fri Dec 01 1989 16:25 | 27 |
| >< Note 290.36 by VINO::DZIEDZIC >
> -< Old traditions die hard >->
>
> 15 amp is the defacto standard. Of course, you need to use
> different receptacles and switches with 20 amp circuits, since
> the common ones are only rated at 15 amps.
Wrong! Check out NEC Table 210-21(b)(3)
Circuit rating amperes Receptacle rating amperes
______________________ _________________________
15 Not over 15
20 *15* or 20
********************************************************************************
Now back to the original question:
NEC 210-21(b) states that the maximum Cord- and Plug-Connected load to
receptacle - (15 amp circuit) to be 12 amps.
1600w/120v= 13.3amps Yep, I believe you're overtaxing that cicuit a bit.
Ross
|
290.48 | Thanks for the replies | SALEM::HO | | Fri Dec 01 1989 19:07 | 21 |
| Thanks for all the info so far.
1. The smoke detectors (5) are with the same circuit as the two
fluorecent lights. The electrician mentioned that the frequency in
the fluorencent lights contibuted that. If I want to get it fixed
I need to seperate them into two circuits. But my question is why the
detectors in the old house (3) worked fine prior to the addition
of two new smoke detectors?
2. Well, I guess I over taxed the circuit. I had mentioned to the
electrician about putting a 20 amp breaker in place of the 15 amp.
He kind of hesitate about it but did not object. HOwever, from the
response I got here it suggested that the wires and recepticles
might not be sized to handle it. I don't need the electric
heater. But the way the circuit was wired, if I turn on all
possible load (lights) on that circuit it could achieve 1500 watts.
Besides, the fluorescent light in the load will fliger(sp) when
I have close to 1300 watts on the circuit.
Kin
|
290.49 | | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | Digital Designs with PDF | Fri Dec 01 1989 21:19 | 18 |
| First, try replacing the smoke detectors. We got two bad ones that
would sometimes produce false alarms, but have had no problems since
replacing them. They should still be under warranty.
Second, your electrician is probably right in saying that the smoke
detectors can be triggered by the noise from the lights. The
instructions that came with our detectors indicated that that could be
a problem, and suggested the same solution. However, I'd try replacing
the detectors first, since their sensitivity seems to vary. You may
even want to try swapping them around, exchanging the ones that are closest
in the circuit to the lights with ones that are futher away; it's a
cheap experiment.
A third option may be to put filters in the line to keep the noise from
the fluorescents isolated. That's beyond my expertise, but someone
here should know how.
Gary
|
290.50 | re .38 | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Sat Dec 02 1989 18:38 | 23 |
| Just a nit on .38...
You don't have to replace your 15A receptacles to have a 20A circuit.
It's legal (and reasonable) to have several 15A receptacles on a 20A
circuit. If you heater wasn't designed to plug into a 15A circuit,
you wouldn't be able to fit the cord into your 15A receptacles.
HOWEVER, to have a 20A circuit, you must make absolutely sure that
every single wire from the circuit breaker on out is a #12 instead
of a #14. If that isn't the case, you must leave it as a 15A circuit.
Your electrician knows this (I should hope), but it's your house,
you should know it, too.
How to tell a #12 from a #14 wire? It's printed on the outer sheath.
After struggling with some 20A circuits in my house, I suspect that
electricians like 15A circuits because #14 wire is easier to work with.
One more thing. The receptacles have to be rated for 20A passthrough
to use them on a 20A circuit. The 15A receptacles that I bought are
all that way, so I don't suppose it's a problem.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
290.51 | Nominal isn't | REGENT::GETTYS | Bob Gettys N1BRM 235-8285 | Mon Dec 04 1989 12:43 | 15 |
| Re .31
Nominal line voltage varies some from company to
company and has been drifting upwards over the years. Boston
Edison considers 120 to be nominal with +/- 6 volts to be the
normal variation. (That's +/- 5%). Under normal circumstances,
they consider anything below 110 to be unacceptable and below
100 (even during a brownout) to be cause for immediate action
(doesn't always mean today though). They also react rather
quickly to voltages above about 128 to 130. I have had personal
experience with all of this over the last two years as my
distibution area is more than obsolete. It's got more band-aids
than anything I know!
/s/ Bob
|
290.52 | Are All The Smoke Dectectors The Same Brand? | ELWOOD::DUFORT | | Sun Dec 17 1989 19:06 | 7 |
| Are all the smoke detectors the same brand? When I put on my addition
i was told by an electrician and the electreical supply house that
mixing different brands of smoke detectors may cause problems. I could
not find the brand that was in the house, so I ended up buying all new
ones. I haven't had any problem.
Dave
|
290.96 | I must provide wire to the pole (underground) | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Mon May 07 1990 15:35 | 19 |
| Someone around note .33 or .34 said that in Mass, the electric company
provides service to the house and you have to install the wire on the
side of your house, but wondered what happens with underground service.
In Boylston, the electric department used to install the service to
the meter, regardless, but no longer does that -- it sounded like
they don't even provide the overhead lines anymore. They certainly
do not provide underground service, which I am getting. I must provide
the wire and the conduit, including metal conduit 10' up the side of
the pole.
Enjoy,
Larry
PS -- I'm putting in 200A service, using 4/0 Al wire in a 2" conduit.
That's really just rated in the code book for 180A, but the electric
company is allowing it. Their wire on the pole is just 1/0. If it
turns out that their 1/0 wire causes too much voltage drop (and I can
prove it), I believe that they are required to replace it.
|
290.97 | You pay to go underground | EVETPU::MCCARTHY | You remind me of a nightmare. | Tue May 08 1990 10:39 | 38 |
| re .40:
If you want an underground feed you have to pay for it (and the
labor involved) yourself. This can get very expensive depending on
how far the run is (by the way I would suggest copper, it is more
expensive but it will handle any extra load ALOT better). As always,
the hardest part is the trench. Depending on the electric company and
where the nearest pole is there may be more permits involved (like if
the pole is on city property (aka sidewalk) and not private land).
(also run the phone, cable in the trench, if they can not do it at the
same time, run a 1" pvc and bring it up next to the pole)
Fyi on the 90 degree sweep going up beside the pole, we used a pvc
sweep coming into the 10' ridgid conduit and we ended up having to put
a grounding strap on it (with a grounding rod). The inspector told us
afterwords that if we had used a ridgid conduit sweep it would have
avoided the need for the ground rod.
Within reasons, Mass Electric and Boston Edison will provide service
for a new house similar to that provided in surrounding houses. This
means that if your neighbors have overhead, they will give you overhead
at no charge (well small charge), if they have underground, they will
bring it to the nearest pole and the rest is up to you. If the
distance from the nearest existing pole and your house is over a
certain distance, they may require you to buy as many poles as it takes
to get the service close enough (at some fixed price per pole and per
foot of extra wire). For an overhead service, the cable from the
pressure connectors down to the meter socket is owned by the home
owner, from that point out to the street it is the electric companys'
and they (at least Boston Edison) get pissed off if you cut their wire
when doing a serivce change.
The electric company in the town that I last did an underground service
change in charged the people 300.00 to remove the overhead line
(about a 110' run) and connect to the underground service that was at
the pole. What a scam.
Brian
|
290.98 | | WOODRO::THOMS | digital index operator | Tue May 08 1990 11:33 | 14 |
|
>PS -- I'm putting in 200A service, using 4/0 Al wire in a 2" conduit.
>That's really just rated in the code book for 180A, but the electric
>company is all
Let's see, My code book says: Article 310, notes to Tables 310-16 - 310-31
3. Aluminum 4/0 is rated for a 200 ampere service.
It's nice of the electric company to allow you to comply with the NEC.
Ross
|
290.99 | The code must be read carefully | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Wed May 09 1990 12:16 | 25 |
| re .-1:
This is a lesson to me to read the notes that go with the tables and not
just the tables. Table 310-16 does indeed show 4/0 Al (75 degree) as
having a maximum ampacity of 180A, but note 3 specifies that 4/0 can be
used for a 200A service entry cable. I presume that I do have to follow
the table for the cable from my main panel to my subpanel, though. Note
8 seems to further limit the ampacity of a 3 wire plus ground cable in a
conduit, but notes 10 and 11 redefine "conductor" in this context.
I'm glad the explanation is in the notes and not in the fact that I'm
using a 1981 code book. I'd hate to think that the properties of aluminum
wire had changed in the past decade.
Enjoy,
Larry
PS -- Of course, it really *is* nice of my electric company to let me
comply with the NEC! As far as I can figure out, they can be as much
more restrictive as they like, and there wouldn't be much I could do
about it. For example, the wire inspector told me to put my conduits
30" underground, not 24" as per the NEC. He said it was the frost line.
I put the holes through my foundation at 24" before I talked with him,
so I hope he'll accept my coming through the foundation and then running
the conduit down an extra 6".
|
290.100 | | WOODRO::THOMS | digital index operator | Wed May 09 1990 12:31 | 11 |
| > <<< Note 343.43 by RGB::SEILER "Larry Seiler" >>>
> -< The code must read carefully
Actually Larry, The electric company probably could care less to what they
hookup to. It's the electrical inspector that has the final say and can be
more or less restrictive than the NEC. Why are you using a 1981 code book?
The 1990 are out, many changes over the last three editions.
I'll post any new code changes after my code class this summer.
Ross
|
290.444 | Power goes off - toggling main breaker restores it | FGVAXL::QUATTROCHI | | Mon Jul 09 1990 12:22 | 12 |
| I'm having a problem with the electricity in my house. Twice
last night everything in the house went dead. I was able to
restore power by toggling the main circuit breaker to the
house off and on. None of the circuit breakers had tripped by
themselves, and we have'nt added any major appliances lately.
Any suggestions or ideas would be appreciated. My best guess
so far is that it's a faulty circuit breaker.
Thanks in advance,
Doug
|
290.445 | lizards do that! | FSTVAX::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Mon Jul 09 1990 16:24 | 9 |
| i once had exactly the same thing happen. it was caused by a lizard
(not too many of THOSE in MA) which had the misfortune of getting
across the bus bars inside the breaker box and occasionally shorted
them. It only happened every so often, but was immediately obvious
once I removede the cover of the box.
be careful
tony
|
290.446 | An all too typical reason | REGENT::MOZER | H.C.C. ;-) | Mon Jul 09 1990 16:52 | 48 |
|
Another possibility that may be causing the problem you have and the
symptom it shows is relatively heavy power being drawn through your
other circuit breakers.
Generally speaking, if you add up the rated current of all the
individual breakers in your box, it almost always exceeds the current
rating of your main breaker.
When doing the addition, keep in mind that usually your breakers are
connected between one of the 2 "hot" lines coming into your house
or apartment and the "common" coming in.
Using my breaker box as an example:
Our main breaker is a 100 AMP one. On each "side" of the breaker box
there are about 6 20 amp breakers and 4 15 amp ones. Now a sample
situation that would show your symptoms. For this example, there are
NO faulty appliances or any other kind of fault. All of the "loads"
are the correct one for the device it is powering.
Let's also suppose that every one of the circuits the box feeds is
drawing 11 amps. So, none of the individual breakers would trip
(they are 15 and 20 amp types), but the current passing through
each side of the feed would be 10 circuits/side multiplied by the
11 amps each circuit is drawing. 10 x 11 = 110 amps total load
for each side of the box, which exceeds the 100 AMP rating of the main
breaker, so the main breaker would trip but none of the individual
ones would!
This problem can possibily be solved by shifting some of the wiring to
you breaker box to divide the load more evenly on both sides of the
breaker box. Another solution is if you know where each of the
breakers powers in your house, you can divide the loading to both sides
by changing which outlet(s) your appliances are connected to.
Several of your "heavy duty" appliances have their own dedicated
breakers, for example if you have an electric stove, electric clothes
dryer, etc., these usually have their own separate breaker/circuit.
The heavy users on your other lines can be things like electric irons,
bathroom heat lamps, portable electric heaters, hot air combs, etc.
Each of these can draw about 10 amps, which can be causing the symptoms
you are seeing.
Hope this info helps you out.....
Joe
|
290.447 | Regarding .2 | CAR::QUATTROCHI | | Tue Jul 10 1990 13:28 | 6 |
| Thanks for the advice on .2 but the main circuit breaker does not
trip when the power goes out, and our pattern of usage has been
roughly the same for the past three years, i.e. no major appliances
purchased since then.
Doug
|
290.448 | Bad Breaker??? | BIZNIS::CADMUS | | Tue Jul 10 1990 15:26 | 22 |
|
You said you had to "toggle" the main breker to reset it- does this
mean that the breker position is "on", but that it is actually
tripped? If that is the case- the breaker is bad- replace it.
I had this happen to me on several breakers after a small lightning
"hit"- the breaker contacts were fried in some of the circuits and
the would intermittantly open.
If the breaker trips- it could be a bad breaker or some heavy loads.
The fact that it is the main breaker that trips and none of the
circuitstrips, and there are no changes in your usage pattern
would lead me to suspect the breaker or some intermittent short ahead
of the circuit panel and after the main breakers.
Whatever you do , be careful- you have 220v and lots of current in that
panel- one mistake and you could be DEAD! The mains are still hot even
after you turn off the main C.B.
Dick
|
290.449 | | VIA::ENABLE::glantz | Mike @ZKO, Nashua NH | Tue Jul 10 1990 15:44 | 12 |
| You may just be misinterpreting the main breaker. Many breakers, when
tripped, don't flip over to the off position. They look like they're
still on (unless you look really closely), and must be set completely
to off and then back on again to reset. I'm almost positive that this
is what's happening in your situation.
The problem is to find out why the main breaker is tripping. This is
indeed a problem, because it often (though not always) means that
there's something wrong inside the breaker panel. Sometimes it's water,
other times it's faulty wiring. In any case, there's a fire risk. If
you're not *very* competent at opening up the main panel, call someone
who is. And do it soon.
|
290.450 | | VIA::ENABLE::glantz | Mike @ZKO, Nashua NH | Tue Jul 10 1990 17:18 | 5 |
| By the way, just to be accurate, there's no actual 220V inside, just
two different phases of 110V. If you managed to connect yourself across
both of these then, yes, you'd get a 220V shock, but it's more likely
you'd just get a 110V jolt, which is only slightly less deadly (can you
be slightly less dead?). In any case, as Dick recommended, don't guess.
|
290.451 | Electrician On The Way | CAR::QUATTROCHI | | Wed Jul 11 1990 14:34 | 7 |
| I have an electrician coming to look at it tonight, I've done some
minor wiring on my own but I'd NEVER do anything involving the
breaker panel. I'll enter a reply tomorrow with his findings.
Thanks for all the responses.
Doug
|
290.452 | Main Circuit Breaker/Box | FGVAXL::QUATTROCHI | | Fri Jul 13 1990 12:58 | 11 |
| The electrician came last night. He replaced the main circuit breaker,
and found a potential problem with the box. There was water in the
retaining ring, and the knockout at the bottom of the box was
partially pushed in. I've contacted PSNH about the box, and they're
going to fix it.
Again thanks for all the replies.
Until the next blackout...
Doug
|
290.580 | Brownout: causes & cures needed... | DEMON::DEMON::CHALMERS | Ski or die... | Tue Aug 21 1990 19:38 | 25 |
| Last night, from approx 8:30pm 'til 11:30pm, we experienced a severe
brown-out in certain sections of our house (which is a typical split
ranch). Although we never completely lost power, there was a *severe*
dimness in the lighting in the dining room, kitchen, bath and basement
ceiling fixtures. Also, the appliances in the kitchen were affected.
(Curiously, the non-digital clocks in the kitchen lost approx. 1 hour's
time over the two hour period...). The lighting in the other rooms, and
the appliances in the other rooms, were not affected. Electrical usage
at the time was average or below-average. There was no combination of
appliances that hasn't been in use before. During the brownout, there
were occasional periods of normal lighting. This morning, everything
seemed back to normal.
During the brownout, I checked all circuit breakers, but nothing
appeared to have tripped. I shut off and reset each affected circuit
anyway, but it had no affect on the situation.
We've called the local power company, and the're coming to check it out
tonight/tomorrow. We're holding off on calling an electrician until we
here what they have to say.
This has got us baffled. Any suggestions or ideas about what could have
caused this will be appreciated.
Freddie
|
290.581 | compressor problem? | TOOLS::ASCHNEIDER | Andy Schneider - DTN 381-2475 | Tue Aug 21 1990 19:58 | 12 |
| Can you isolate the problem to a particular circuit within the
house? We've had a case where our a/c tried to kick on, and the
compressor wasn't ready. The result was a "brown out" situation on
that circuit until we turned the unit off. You mentioned the
kitchen - could it be that the refrigerator was "trying" to kick the
compressor on, and it couldn't? Did it appear to be working ok?
Do you have any other items in the house with compressors (refrig's,
freezers, dehumidifiers, air conditioners, water coolers, etc) that
could have had a problem? That's the first place I'd look.
andy
|
290.582 | | SHARE::HPROCTOR | | Wed Aug 22 1990 00:20 | 9 |
| [1] Your house has two 110v lines coming into it joined together
in your elect. panel they give you 220v for stoves ,dryers etc but used
separately they give you two separate 110v sets of circuits ,of which
some areas will be on A circuit & others will be on B circuit
so if only one circuit has a problem be it outside or inside your home
it would only affect the switches & recepticles on that circuit.
It could be loose wires at your pole or transformer
or it could be loose connections in your panel at your circuit breakers
|
290.583 | This one sounds familiar! | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Wed Aug 22 1990 14:37 | 14 |
| When we had this problem it turned out to be because the electric meter
was not properly sealed when the electric company decided to replace
it, and the circuit-breaker box connection inside had gotten all
corroded so one side of the 220 line wasn't making good contact anymore
(you could usually "fix" the problem temporarily by turning the main
cricuit breaker off and on). We had to have the whole circuit breaker
box replaced and resealed - an expensive job, and half of the house was
running on extension cords to the other half for several days until the
electrician could come and do the job (luckily we don't actually have
any 220 volt appliances since we are on the natural gas line, so we
could still cook, heat water, do laundry, etc.). You probably want to
get an electrician in to look at it; it won't get better by itself.
/Charlotte
|
290.584 | Elec. Co. will install recorder | DEMON::DEMON::CHALMERS | Ski or die... | Thu Aug 23 1990 13:52 | 22 |
| Followup to .0:
The electric company came Tuesday morning to check it out, and they
feel that the problem's definitely on their end. They're due back today
to install a 'recorder' (what is that?) on the line to try to identify
the problem. (I'm not 100% sure what they hope to accomplish since I
wasn't home when they came and am getting this info second-hand from my
wife.) I'll post the results when they're available.
Re: .1
We occassionally experienced mini-brownouts when the a/c tried to kick
on, but we haven't used a/c since last year. (We're cooling with fans
instead.) The big users on the line at the time were the elec. clothes
dryer, the refrigerator/freezer and the dehumidifier. I tried shutting
each of them off individually, but there was no obvious improvement in
the situation.
Thanks for your responses. I appreciate the advice and look forward to
more.
Freddie
|
290.585 | | MEMORY::BROWER | | Fri Aug 24 1990 12:03 | 15 |
| Be real careful with Appliances with compressors during a brownout!!
A few years ago in New Braintree, Mass we had one that lasted for about
4 hours. The line voltage dropped to about 40 volts. I heard the
refrigerator in the kitchen trying to kick in so I unplugged it. I then
went downstairs to unplug our chest freezer. Well when power was
restored we found the compressor in the chest freezer had seized. You
know not enough voltage to turn it over but enough current to weld the
contacts. We had it fixed by a Refrigeration guy that essentially jump
started it with about 170 volts.
I called Mass. Electric and they let me talk to an Engineer. He told
me to be quicker in unplugging appliances should a brownout ever occur
again. Fancey that they'd accept no responsibility for a line not going
completely dead.
Bob
|
290.586 | does the A/C do it too? | CSCOAC::MULLINS_D | | Tue Aug 28 1990 20:40 | 8 |
|
Is it normal for the lights in the house (not even the same circuit
as the A/C) to dim slightly momentarily when the A/C kicks on. If so
is there a way to tell how much dimming is too much. The A/C is also
on its own circuit.
thanks,
Drew
|
290.587 | Tangentially related | SNDPIT::SMITH | Smoking -> global warming! :+) | Tue Aug 28 1990 22:27 | 10 |
| I saw a neat little toy the other day in a tool catalog (Contact East?)
that could measure the voltage drop in a line. It looks kind of like
one of those 3-prong hot-neut-ground-reversed testers, but when you
push a button it puts a {15, 20?} amp load on the line for 1/2 cycle
(not long enough to trip breakers or blow fuses) and sees if the
voltage drops more than 5(?) percent. Pretty expensive, but definately
something I'm going to get when we get a little more seriously into
looking for a house...
Willie
|
290.588 | A record is | DECLNE::WATKINS | Elvis is living in Peoria | Tue Sep 04 1990 14:36 | 6 |
| A recorder is a strip chart device that measures and records the
voltage supplied by the power company. It has all the response of a
Mack truck. Power has to dip for usually a minute for it to catch it.
If the problem continues ask them to put a good power monitor on such
as a Dranetz power monitor. This device will catch power glitches in
the micro second range and as small as 5 volts.
|
290.772 | I can stop my meter! | SALEM::COVIELLO | Shaun's, Nicholas's, Amanda's, & Bryanna's Daddy | Thu Oct 04 1990 13:41 | 8 |
| I was looking at my meter the other day, and it seemed to be going
rather fast, considering nobody was home except me, and I was outside.
I tapped on the meter (glass part) and the wheel actually slowed down,
I was able to get it to the point of stopping for several minutes.
My question is: Is this normal or is there something wrong with the
meter? I don't want to give PS anymore money then I have too.
Paul
|
290.773 | Could be a defective meter, but... | SNDPIT::SMITH | Smoking -> global warming! :+) | Thu Oct 04 1990 15:15 | 14 |
| If this is really happening, there's something _very_ wrong with your
meter, but I'd first look for appliances that draw power even when
no-one is home:
electric clock
electric hot water heater
central air conditioner
electric heat
instant-on hot water heater under sink
another apartment has some outlets on your meter (this happened to me!)
I dunno if any of these apply...
Willie
|
290.774 | transformers | EVETPU::IMPINK::mccarthy | Sometimes you just got to say What the .... | Thu Oct 04 1990 15:51 | 5 |
| Don't forget any transformers that you have in your house
(like doorbell, furnace) and those little lights on your
smoke dectectors.
bjm
|
290.775 | Beat it into submission. ;^) | DCSVAX::COTE | Here come Julie's lips! | Thu Oct 04 1990 16:13 | 9 |
| Some turning of the meter is normal, but having it change speeds by
whacking it upside the head certainly isn't. Grab hold of the glass
and wiggle it from side to side, up and down, and in and out. The
meter just kind of "plugs in" to the box and maybe you've got flakey
contacts.
Of course, it may start spinning faster!
Edd
|
290.776 | + it is a single family | SALEM::COVIELLO | Shaun's, Nicholas's, Amanda's, & Bryanna's Daddy | Thu Oct 04 1990 17:42 | 12 |
| Oh it definitely wiggles in all directions :-)
water pump
microwave
a couple of fluorescent lights
water bed heater
no doorbells
no furnace per se
not really much
Paul
|
290.777 | "Wiggle waggle" | DNEAST::BLUM_ED | | Thu Oct 04 1990 19:01 | 6 |
|
Wiggle it till it doesnt turn much and keepaumoutshut...:*)...
E
|
290.778 | DIY brownouts? | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Thu Oct 04 1990 19:35 | 7 |
| .58:
If it doesn't turn much when wiggled because the contacts are "flaky"
and have significant resistance, that could prove to be the most
expensive few dollars a month you've saved.
Dick
|
290.779 | insulate my friend | CSDNET::DICASTRO | Global Re-leaf! | Fri Oct 05 1990 15:36 | 8 |
| re -a few
do not forget your refridgerator...
Also, if you plan on wiggling you meter ,I would recomend you insulate
your self from the ground. (Try a plastic milk crate).
/bd/
|
290.780 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Oct 05 1990 15:59 | 8 |
| Re: .60
According to the Time-Life book that discusses the topic, when you
"pull a meter", you're supposed to be wearing special rubber insulating
gloves that conform to some ANSI spec, as well as standing on an insulating
wood sheet. I would be very cautious when fiddling with a meter.
Steve
|
290.781 | | DICKNS::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Mon Oct 08 1990 16:26 | 3 |
| ...then there's the former fireman I talked to who described how
to "pull a meter" by whacking it with a fire axe. I wouldn't
worry too much.
|
290.782 | Call them for advice | EVETPU::DDIF::MCCARTHY | Sometimes you just got to say What the .... | Tue Oct 09 1990 00:16 | 17 |
| >>According to the Time-Life book that discusses the topic, when you
>>"pull a meter", you're supposed to be wearing special rubber insulating
>>gloves that conform to some ANSI spec, as well as standing on an insulating
>>wood sheet. I would be very cautious when fiddling with a meter.
I love them time-life books. I am sure each time they describe ANYTHING their
legal department as a bird. "No, thats not good enought. Tell them to put on
a 20 guage rubber suit before turning off the breaker. They have to cover
their asses. The glass that surrounds the meter is insulating you. I have
never used any gloves, any wood sheet. Now my disclamer, I learned on the job
and have done about 50+ service changes.
On the other hand, that meter is not yours, it is the property of the electric
company and they may/will get ticked off at you unless you have a good reason
for disconnecting it.
Brian
|
290.783 | | BOSOX::TIMMONS | I'm a Pepere! | Tue Oct 23 1990 16:49 | 4 |
| Hmm, I can't disconnect my meter unless I break a seal. Are there
some electric companies that *don't* seal the meters?
Lee
|
290.784 | | DDIF::EVETPU::MCCARTHY | Soon a REAL editor on ULTRIX | Tue Oct 23 1990 22:19 | 7 |
| re:>> some electric companies that *don't* seal the meters?
Only if they are very trusting. It is there for the reason you suspect, to
prevent theft of their money! If there is an real need to pull the meter then
you break the seal and call them to explain why.
bjm
|
290.785 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | whatsa Gort? | Wed Oct 24 1990 00:21 | 8 |
| RE-.1
I suggest calling before you break the seal once broken it's their word
against your's that the reading hasen't been altered and they usually
win. Void in emergency like fire.
-j
|
290.786 | | REGENT::GETTYS | Bob Gettys N1BRM 235-8285 | Wed Oct 24 1990 12:45 | 7 |
|
And then there's the case where my meter wasn't sealed
for 10 years after I moved into the house! It was only done one
time (and not the first!) when I had a service truck out to the
house because of low voltage.
/s/ Bob
|
290.787 | Call power co. before | CLUSTA::MATTHES | half a bubble off plumb | Wed Oct 24 1990 23:41 | 8 |
|
Call before you remove the meter. What would you want them to do if
the roles were reversed.
When I rewired from 100 to 200 amps, I called and told them I was going
to pull the meter to do that and that I wanted them to be down that
afternoon to re-install it. They said, "We'll be out bright and early
to pull the meter FOR you."
|
290.589 | Dimming lites/noise on TV | SAHQ::MULLINS | | Tue Nov 13 1990 17:30 | 15 |
| I can understand voltage drops on a given circuit when a certain
high current drawing device on the same circuit kicks on, but why
would lights on other circuits be affected by a device on an entirely
different circuit.
Beside the dimming of the lights when the A/C kicks in I've also
noticed niose generated on the TV when light switches are toggled.
(again these are two different circuits).
What gives?
All help is greatly appreciated!
Drew
|
290.590 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Tue Nov 13 1990 18:15 | 11 |
| re .9:
> I can understand voltage drops on a given circuit when a certain
> high current drawing device on the same circuit kicks on, but why
> would lights on other circuits be affected by a device on an entirely
> different circuit.
Don't forget that your whole house is on the same circuit before the breaker
box. You may have an insufficient feed or a corroded contact in your service.
-Mike
|
290.591 | | SAHQ::MULLINS | | Tue Nov 13 1990 18:58 | 10 |
| re.10
How does one find out if it is insufficient feed or a corroded
contact. I assume before the breaker box means from the pole to
the meter to the circuit breaker box.
Does this sound like some sought of a grounding problem?
Thanks,
Drew
|
290.592 | Service upgrade stopped my brownouts | DEMON::DEMON::CHALMERS | Ski or die... | Tue Nov 13 1990 19:01 | 33 |
| RE:.9,.10
I apologize for not posting my results sooner...
Yes, as one of the earlier replies to my original note suggested, if
you have a bad connection on one of the two lines from the pole that
feed your service panel, all circuits that feed off of that branch
could/would/should be affected.
As it turned out, the electric company pulled the electric meter and
found that one of my connections was severely corroded & burnt. They
claimed ownership of the line only as far as the weatherhead, so the
problem was mine to fix.
Since I was planning to add a subpanel to accomodate a basement
remodeling job, I had an electrician install a complete service
upgrade. For $850, they removed the 100 amp line and the old
electrical panel (which was maxxed out), and installed a 200 amp line
with a new panel that had enough room for my old circuits, the new
circuits for the basement, and still has room for future circuits. It
took a 2-man crew the better part of a day (BTW, a Saturday, and at no
additional cost...). Even though he couldn't use my old breakers in my
new panel, he even gave me $100 credit for them because he could
eventually use them somewhere else. It wasn't inexpensive, but didn't
seem too bad considering what I would have had to spend anyhow to add
the additional capacity for my new basement w/bathroom. (geez...reading
this over, it sound like my next stop is the Electricians note to leave
a recommendation...:^)
Hope someone else can learn from my experience. Thanks again for all
the advice & comments. I really appreciated the info.
Freddie
|
290.593 | Possible "brownout" at an outlet? | SASE::SZABO | The Beer Hunter | Tue Nov 13 1990 20:04 | 31 |
290.594 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Tue Nov 13 1990 20:17 | 18 |
| re .13:
The Nintendo may be generating some RF interference to the TV. Hard to say
for sure from the description.
re .11:
Do you happen to know what size wire feeds your power panel? What service
rating (100 amps, 60 amps) do you have? Do you happen to know what the
distance from the pole to the panel is?
About the only way to tell for sure is have an electrician look. You can be
pretty sure if you have a circuit that has NO load on it except for a lamp, and
the lamp dims unacceptably (to you) when an A/C or something kicks in. If any
circuits get BRIGHTER when something on another circuit kicks in, this is an
indication of too high resistance in the feed, specifically the neutral.
-Mike
|
290.595 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Originality = Undetected Plagiarism | Wed Nov 14 1990 13:43 | 30 |
| I'm inclined along the RF intererence path.
There are then two ways that the interference is getting to the
TV ... one by direct radiation, or the other by the power line.
If it is by direct radiation, then I'd believe it is off the
controller wires. If via the power line, then I'd be inclined
to believe that the system changes its behaviour on discovering a
plugged in controller.
Two possibilities ...
If it is direct radiation, moving the Nintendo box and the controller
wires should alter the fuzziness.
If it is via the power line, then plug in power line filters would
help. One definitely for the Nintendo, and maybe one for the TV.
It could be that the internal power line filter in the TV has gone
West (South or wherever).
Stuart
ps. Two other thoughts .... Do the TV and Nintendo have polarized
plugs? If not then try turning one OR the other the other way around.
And also check the outlets with an outlet tester, in case the Neutral
line has a high resistance to ground ... this could cause lots of
weird problems.
|
290.418 | Possible solution | MILKWY::MORRISON | Bob M. FXO-1/28 228-5357 | Sun Feb 10 1991 16:13 | 11 |
| It's been 11 months. Were you able to get a meter for this purpose? If so,
how? One thing that occurred to me is because the meter is for your own use and
not for power company use, you don't need the high accuracy that a utility meter
requires. Therefore buying a utility meter, which is quite expensive, is not the
best solution.
I recently visited an apartment complex in which each unit has a small elec-
tric meter INSIDE the unit to maesure that unit's usage. The meter is read by
the landlord and/or tenant. This is in addition to the power company's meter,
which is for the entire building. The unit meter was imported from Europe.
If you could get your hands on one of these, it would be ideal for this appli-
cation.
|
290.453 | Electrical problem: Intermittent flicker on all ckts | MILKWY::MORRISON | Bob M. FXO-1/28 228-5357 | Sun Feb 10 1991 16:27 | 21 |
| I live in an 80-year-old house that has 4 apartments in it. The wiring is
old. (I don't know how old.) There are 3 circuits in my unit. I have a weird
electrical problem. Several times an hour, the lights get dim and flicker for
5 to 10 seconds at a time. The flicker is at a frequency of about 5 Hertz.
The flicker occurs on all 3 circuits simultaneously. It is not in sync with
any appliance in my unit.
Two months ago I complained to the landlord about this. He said he would call
an electrician. I don't know if the electrician came, but the problem is still
there. I don't want to send my landlord on a wild goose chase looking for this
problem and frankly, I don't have much confidence in the ability of an elec-
trician to track down a problem like this, based on the sketchy information I
have. Also, my landlord can't afford to rewire the whole house in an attempt to
fix this.
Has anybody reading this ever had a similar problem, and fixed it? If so, what
caused the problem?
Would it be better to call the electric company (Mass. Elec.) before calling
an electrician, to see if the source of the problem is outside the house? What
concerns me most is that the problem shows up on all circuits, which means
either the source is on the line side of the breakers or the disturbance is
feeding back from one circuit thru the breaker panel to the other circuits.
Please reply to me directly. I don't read this file often.
|
290.454 | We aren't as stupid as you think!!! | WMOIS::BOUDREAU_C | | Thu Feb 14 1991 20:58 | 8 |
| Bob,
One should choose words more carefully. Electricians experience
this type of problem quite often. Any electrician that knows what he is
doing should pinpoint the problem (as long as it occurs while he is
there) in less than 2 hours.
CB
|
290.455 | Look outside your unit. | XK120::SHURSKY | Stuntman for Wile E. Coyote. | Fri Feb 15 1991 14:14 | 9 |
| I have noticed a similar problem in my house. I don't know if it is over all
circuits but it happens over the kitchen and bedroom circuits at least. It
appears to be caused by my oil fired FHW furnace kicking in (not the circulating
pump). The lights flicker and then I can hear the burner come to life. I just
assume it is because the mechanism draws a little extra juice to get started.
My fix has been to ignore it because it is too low on the annoyance scale.
(any electricians feel free to comment if this is not the case)
Stan
|
290.456 | Same problem | NAC::SCHLENER | | Fri Feb 15 1991 16:44 | 8 |
| I have the same problem with my house when the propane furnance starts
up. I've never checked what's coming into the house but I assume with
all the appliances that I have, not enough juice comes in to satisfy
the furnance. So I have a mini-brown out for about 5 secs.
Once again, as Re .-1 mentioned, it's one of the things that would
finally get fixed after living in the house 15 years or more.
Cindy
|
290.457 | Overloaded utility transformer? | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Fri Feb 15 1991 16:51 | 15 |
| This may be buried somewhere in one of the electrical topics, but
I'll repeat it here.
It is entirely possible the utility company's transformer which
serves your house (and others) is under-rated for the load which
resides on it. If any of your neighbors experience the same type
of "flicker" when a heavy load kicks in, it is not unreasonable
to have the power company look into the matter. This "overloading"
sometimes happens when new construction occurs in a neighborhood
(but this is obviously not the case if the problem has "always"
happened).
Then again, as .3 has said, perhaps you're just running your
service feeds at/near capacity. A service upgrade might be the
only reasonable solution.
|
290.458 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Fri Feb 15 1991 17:59 | 10 |
| re .4:
An overloaded utility transformer is a possibility. A more likely possibility
is too much resistance in the feed from the pole to the fuse/breaker box, or
the run from the transformer to the box is too long (same thing, actually).
Especially if some circuits get _brighter_ when the furnace/whatever kicks in.
I have this problem, the feed from the pole is an old 60A feed. Too much
resistance in the neutral will do this.
-Mike
|
290.459 | check circuit load | DEMING::WRIGHT | | Sat Feb 16 1991 20:03 | 20 |
| Another item to think about before calling the utility company is to
determine exactly which circuits flicker, and if they are all on the
same circuit breaker as the furnace.....
Sometimes, especially in older houses, certain lights and outlets are
wired on the same circuit as a higher current use appliance ....such as
the furnace....This was done because most blowers, fans, motors ,etc
have a high current starter cil that is used to start the appliance.
once started it auto switches to a lower current coil. Since the high
current is only used for a small portion of the time, it is usually
safe for other outlets to be added .
Unfortunatly, When the high current coil does kick in, it produces a
voltage drop on that particular circuit. When the voltage drops you
will see the lights flicker and the brightness will decrease. Than when
the high current coil kicks out, the lights will flicker again as the
voltage and brightness of the lights return to normal.
Solution is to put the high current device on its own circuit.....Easy
to say and not so easy to do......
|
290.244 | Advice on brands - GE, others | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sat Mar 02 1991 12:51 | 16 |
| I'm in the market for a new breaker box to replace my current
main fuse box, and would like some advice on brands. I have read
here and heard elsewhere that Square-D is the "best", but they
also seem to me the most expensive, by a factor of 5 compared
to some others.
The brand I have seen most often at low prices is GE. Builder's
Square is offering a 20-slot panel with 100A main breaker for
$59, and individual breakers are $3.49 each. Would I be getting
decent quality for this price? Does anyone have experience with
GE boxes and breakers? I'm not adverse to spending a bit more
if I get value for the money, and I'd prefer not to have problems
down the road, but the prices of Square-D boxes and breakers
are just too high to swallow.
Steve
|
290.245 | My experience. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Sun Mar 03 1991 11:13 | 17 |
| The major difference between brands is the coating on the contacts.
The more expensive brands have a thicker coating and thus will stand up
better to abuse. Westinghouse and Bryant are both the same for both
breakers and boxes. ITE breakers are made to Westinghouse specs and
are interchangeable. One thing to keep in mind though, is that some
inspectors require that the panel and breakers be the same
manufacturer. This minimizes problems is the panel/breaker is
determined to be the cause of a fire or something.
You are more apt to find ITE and Westinghouse breakers locally.
Challenger is the other popular brand. These too are interchangeable
with ITE etc. My experience has been primarily with ITE and Bryant,
but Challenger is becomming very popular due to its cost. (Less
expensive than ITE usually.)
Dan
|
290.246 | What's available around you.... | EVETPU::MCCARTHY | Well Norm, lets go take a look. | Mon Mar 04 1991 09:50 | 16 |
| re .120:
As .121 hints, it depends on what the electrical supply houses around
you carry. When I was "in the trade" any panels we did were always GE mostly
because the supply house we dealt with handled them almost exclusively. GE did
seem a little more "solid" than ITE and Bryant. I think at the time Bryant was
using a good deal of plastic in the guts of the panel, this may have changed.
Last I heard Square D was coming out with a residential version of their
panels and breakers. This was to bring them into competition with the GE style
of breakers (Square D is one of the few (but not the only) breaker that would
not fit into GE (ITE, Bryant) style panel's).
Square D makes a very nice line of panels and breakers but for
residential use the price is just too high (IMHO).
Brian
|
290.247 | | VMSDEV::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Mon Mar 04 1991 12:49 | 5 |
| One other thing. Unless this is a cottage, upgrade to 200A instead of 100A
unless you have a strong reason not to. The incremental cost is relatively
small, and it saves headaches in the future.
Paul
|
290.248 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Mon Mar 04 1991 15:53 | 9 |
| I had my service upgraded about 2 years ago. I have a Crouse-Hinds panel and
breakers. They seem fine to me. They are available at Builder's Square. I
don't know where they fit into the price category.
I would also have to second Paul's suggestion to go to 200A. I did. I had a
60A fuse service. In today's age, it seems 200A is the most logical upgrade
alternative.
Ed..
|
290.470 | Diff. Brand Breakers in Main Circuit Box? | JUPITR::DICK | | Tue Mar 05 1991 15:04 | 12 |
| I am in the process of upgrading my electrical service from 100 amps
to 200 amps. I have some breakers that will fit in my new load center,
but I have "heard" that all breakers in a load center have to be from
the same maker as the center.
I have looked in the code book and cannot find any info on this ..
can anybody provide info on this ??
Thanks,
Harold Dick
JUPITR::DICK
|
290.249 | Debate 100 vs 200 service | ASDG::SBILL | | Tue Mar 05 1991 15:16 | 9 |
|
I just bought a house that has a 60 amp fuse service. We are
planning to upgrade to 100 amp breaker service sometime in the spring
when we can afford it. I asked the electrician about making it 200
instead of 100 amp and he told me that we wouldn't need more than a 100
amp service. What makes it worth it to go to 200?
Steve B.
|
290.250 | | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Tue Mar 05 1991 15:35 | 23 |
| The primary benefit is the additional capacity of the service (both
in the number of "unused" breaker positions left over in the panel
as well as the current carrying capacity of the new panel).
A lot depends on what large current-consuming appliances you have
OR ARE PLANNING to have. Central A/C will take 20-30 amps for the
compressor, an electric range can draw up to 50 amps, an electric
dryer can draw up to 30 amps, and your kitchen appliances can take
a fair amount as well. A woodworking shop can be a big draw too.
You can quickly reach the maximum load on the service panel if you
happen to run a number of these energy hogs at the same time.
Also, if you ever need to add new circuit, having "unused" slots
for new breakers is a real benefit. (I'm finishing off my basement
rec room, work shop, and etc. - 14 new circuits in all, and I STILL
have room left in the 200 amp service [yes, it's a big house].)
The incremental cost between 100 amps and 200 amps is not all that
great; probably less than $100 in materials.
As a compromise, you COULD go to a 150 amp service if you don't have
central A/C and such. I'd NEVER go with 100 amp unless it is a VERY
small house and I had no plans for any future electrical expansion.
|
290.471 | Not a Rule, Just Happens | ODIXIE::RAMSEY | Rappellers do in on cliffs | Tue Mar 05 1991 16:39 | 5 |
| There is no rule that they have to be all the same brand. The problem
is that not all breakers will fit in ever box. The manufacturers use
different formats to attach the breakers to the box so some just plain
don't fit in your box.
|
290.251 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Mar 05 1991 16:42 | 3 |
| Don't you have to pay the electric company to upgrade your service too?
Steve
|
290.252 | Confused by .126 | MEIS::TOWNSEND | Erik S. Townsend (DTN) 247-2436 | Tue Mar 05 1991 16:45 | 14 |
|
.126 implies that the relationship between the number of breaker
positions in a panel and the service rating is fixed. Is this true? If so,
why?
It seems to me that if you have a 100A service you ought to be able
to put it into ANY size panel, provided that it enters through a 100A main
breaker. Is this wrong???
ET
p.s. Yes, I realize that a capacity problem could arise and that the
total ampage of all circuit breakers must be <= to the rating of
the main.
|
290.253 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Mar 05 1991 16:50 | 9 |
| Re: .128
I had a similar concern. An electrician had told me that there was some
fixed upper limit on the number of circuits allowed for a given service.
I couldn't find anything like that in the code, but there are calculations
for the minimum service for a given total load, so there may be some
interaction there.
Steve
|
290.254 | Most Use a 300amp Service..... | RAVEN1::GHOOPER | Parrotheads Make Great Lovers! | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:34 | 5 |
| Most houses that have a breaker panel installed at the time of
construction have at least a 300amp service.
-Hoop-
|
290.255 | My experience. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Wed Mar 06 1991 10:27 | 31 |
| re: a few
There is a limit of 40 pole positions for 200A service. Using various
forms of half sized (physical) breakers, you can exceed 40 circuits.
The cost of the upgrade from 60A to 200A is no more than the upgrade to
100A from the point of view of the power company. Both the incomming
wire and the meter must be changed. The wire used for 100A service is
the same as for 200A service (from the pole). I believe that it is 2/O
copper cable.
Rough estimates for costs of parts supplied by electrician (or you)
200A meter socket (Millbank) ~$ 40.
200A 40-pole panel (Westinghouse) ~$150.
Breakers 15A, 20A (ITE,Bryant) ~$ 4. ea.
4/O SEU cable aluminum ~$ 3. ea. Ft
Most new construction uses 150A or 200A panels these days. The 200A
panel is the most popular. The cost savings of using either 100A or
150A is minimal. The meter socket may cost a few dollars less and the
panel might save $25.
Dan
Note: The pricing above reflects my cost 1 year ago when I built my
house. Checking with my local supplier indicated that the pricing has
not changed significantly since then.
|
290.472 | I'll check with BOCA officials. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Wed Mar 06 1991 10:32 | 10 |
|
There have been rumblings that the code was to change requiring the
panel and breakers to be of hte same manufacturer. Perhaps the
inspector in my town was ahead of things... He required this and said
that a number of inspectors were also requiring this. I have placed a
call with BOCA to find this out. I could not specifically find a code
requirement that specified this, hence the call. I will post the
results here.
Dan
|
290.473 | my comments | WORDS::DUKE | | Wed Mar 06 1991 10:49 | 19 |
|
I believe it has more to do with the UL/CSA rating/
certification. In order to maintain the rating, if it is
important to you, the breakers must me listed for use in the
panel. For the homeowner this may not be important. There
are many types of breaker which are interchangeable. Murry,
Bryant, etc are. Square D is one which comes to mind as not
being.
I would be careful changing the rating of a main. Is the
panel rated for the larger breaker? That is how I read the
base note, larger main in existing panel. There may not be a
problem. Many 100 amp panels are in reality 200s with a 100
amp main.
Peter
|
290.474 | Addendum to .3 | WORDS::DUKE | | Wed Mar 06 1991 10:54 | 12 |
|
> I would be careful changing the rating of a main. Is the
> panel rated for the larger breaker? That is how I read the
> base note, larger main in existing panel. There may not be a
> problem. Many 100 amp panels are in reality 200s with a 100
> amp main.
Obviously misread the base note. Disregard second
paragraph of .3
|
290.256 | | VMSDEV::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Wed Mar 06 1991 11:49 | 8 |
| > Most houses that have a breaker panel installed at the time of
> construction have at least a 300amp service.
What does the 300A refer to - the service from the street to the house? I would
believe that. But it is certainly not true that most houses have 300A panels in
the house - I haven't heard of any.
Paul
|
290.257 | xxx amp service=total service panels | RAVEN1::RICE_J | Your Advertising Message Here - $5 | Wed Mar 06 1991 12:22 | 14 |
| 300 amp service (or 400 amp service) refers to the total amps of all the
service panels in the house. It could be 200 amp + 100 amp, 150 amp + 150
amp, or 200 amp + 200 amp, etc. My house has a 200 amp service panel
upstairs that handles the oven, range, dryer plus all the outlets and
lights on the first and second floor. There is a 100 amp panel in the
basement that handles the heat pump, air handler, water heater, plus
existing lights and outlets in the basement/garage. There are plenty of
unused slots in the basement panel to add circuits as we finish some
basement rooms. A multiple panel house may require a special meter box to
allow the utility company room to splice the two feeder cables. Local
codes may require a single disconect for all power in the house placed between
the meter and the panels.
Jim
|
290.258 | Some clarification. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Wed Mar 06 1991 15:31 | 9 |
| RE: .133
I think that what you rae referring to is a sub-panel. The 200A panel
is the main and the 100A panel is the sub. Is the power cable for the
100A panel coming from the 200A panel?? Do you have 1 meter or 2? If
one, then you have a main/sub setup. In that case the service you have
is the higher of the two or 200A service.
Dan
|
290.475 | BOCA clarification. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Wed Mar 06 1991 16:04 | 16 |
| re: a few
I just got off the phone with the BOCA interpretations folks:
There is no NEC requirement for the breakers and panel to be tha same
manufacturer. The requirement is to follow any instructions that come
with the panel. If the panel requires its own manufactured breakers
for full compliance, then that is required by the NEC under article
110-3b. So... indirectly if the panel maker requires the same type
breakers then the NEC does too.
All in all, I think that this is a case where the inspector can be a
pain if he/she wants to. The burden of proof appears to be on the
inspector though.
Dan
|
290.259 | Caution: TWO definitions of Service Capacity.. | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early T&N EIC /US-EIS | Wed Mar 06 1991 16:05 | 23 |
| re: 450.133 xxx amp service=total service panels >-
>300 amp service (or 400 amp service) refers to the total amps of all the
>service panels in the house. It could be 200 amp + 100 amp, 150 amp + 150
>amp, or 200 amp + 200 amp, etc. My house has a 200 amp service panel
It is my understanding that when a Realtor says that a house has "60
amp, 100 amp, 200 amp service", that definition applies to the total
number of Amps delivered to the house by the Electric Utility
Company, over the Main wire.
I just talked to Public Service Line Dept in Nashua, NH.
There are TWO definitions of "Service".
1) The one delivered by the public utility to the Service Entrance,
in terms of current availability (total possible draw)
2) The Service capacity of each fuse/breaker box.
Bob
|
290.260 | | CHIEFF::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Mar 06 1991 16:19 | 7 |
290.476 | Inspector calls the shots | USMFG::ELEFFERTS | | Wed Mar 06 1991 17:59 | 5 |
| In my town, Cambridge, the electrical inspector ABSOLUTELY requires
that the panel and breakers be by the same maker. Better find out
what your inspector requires - as previously noted, the inspector
has the final say.
|
290.477 | Inspectors have last say... almost. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Wed Mar 06 1991 20:12 | 23 |
| RE: .-1
The inspector has the final say, but only up to a point. He/she can
not require things that are not part of accepted code. There are code
requirements enacted by town which override the NEC, but again these
must be written. In Mendon, the inspector tried to prevent me from
using special wire nuts known as "Greenies" for ground connections.
Basically "Greenies" are green wire nuts with a hole in the end for one
wire to go through. This allows you to easily connect multiple ground
wires and still have a connection to a switch or outlet. In olden days
you needed a short gound wire that looped from the wirenut to the
switch or outlet. The local inspector wanted me to use crimp
connectors known as Buchanons (sp). In my opinion, these are not as
secure as wirenuts. My arguments that Greenies were no different than
standard wirenuts in terms of UL listing etc were finally resolved
after consultation with the state inspector. I think that the state
inspector's comment was something like: "Get real!!"
If the inspector requires the same manufacturer for the panel and
breakers, he/she must provide proof that the panel manufacturer
requires this. Without proof, he/she has no cause for complaint.
Dan
|
290.261 | Before all else fails, read the instructions!!! | WMOIS::BOUDREAU_C | | Wed Mar 06 1991 21:34 | 41 |
| RE-1
Agreed, in fact most service changes, 100amp upgrade to 200amp the
utility doesn't change their service drop conductors. They realize that
just because there is an upgrade, doesn't mean that the continuous load
will change drastically. If they leave it as is, and they notice more
power consumption, they may be inclined to increase it later. But for
the most part they "retap" the connections at the service head, and
seal the meter socket, that's it.
As for those of you installing "breakers that physically fit in a
given panel" You may be committing a code violation. The code states in
Art. 110-3(b),
"Art 110-3(b)
Installation and use. Listed or labeled equipment shall be used or
installed in accordance with any instructions included in the listing
or labeling."
This means that one must install the breakers as specified in the
panel board's instructions. Most manufacturers want to sell "their"
breakers with their panel. So, they state in the instructions to
install only type so & so breakers. By not following these
instructions, one opens themselves apt a MAJOR liability problem. Since
the installer was capable of installing the equipment, they must have
been capable to read and follow the instructions. If they chose not to,
that was their choice, and they just lifted any liability from the
manufacturer. Just because the inspector OK'ed it doesn't lift the
liability from the installer. The installer should have known better.
One other thing that I would like to state, the maximum number of
overcurrent devices for a lighting and appliance panelboard is 42, not
counting the main. This is in Art 384-15. One would be in violation by
adding "twin" breakers in a 42 circuit panel. This would also be stated
in the panelboard instructions. The manufacturer usually list the
locations that may have "twin" breakers installed. Like I said before,
just because it fits, doesn't make it right, or legal.
Cary
|
290.262 | 300amp Main..... | RAVEN1::GHOOPER | Parrotheads Make Great Lovers! | Thu Mar 07 1991 02:39 | 7 |
| RE: .132
I am refering to a 300amp Main Breaker in your service panel. My
reference comes from the fact that I used to work as a residential
electrician and my father was a electrician, also.
-Hoop-
|
290.478 | You say TA-MA-TOE I say TOE-MATE-TOE | EVETPU::MCCARTHY | Well Norm, lets go take a look. | Thu Mar 07 1991 11:17 | 14 |
| Where inspectors get you is the interpretation of the code. Most of the code
has some area which is "gray". A local inspector can read this any way they
want to and you have to follow it (if it really is a gray area).
Most have little nits that they always try to catch you on but if you have
worked in the town before you know these and you just do what they say because
they can end up costing you a lot of time/material if they say "redo it".
re .7:
I HATE those Buchanons (or what ever they are). The seem to come loose over
time and when they do you have the ends of several bare wires floating around
in a box. The green wire nuts are great, someone had their thinking cap on!
Brian
|
290.263 | drop from street to house IS sized | PCOJCT::MILBERG | I was a DCC - 3 jobs ago! | Thu Mar 07 1991 11:25 | 8 |
| re. earlier
If you have an older house where the drop from the street to the house
was sized for the 60 amp service, the power company WILL have to change
the service line when you upgrade to 200 amps.
-Barry_who_went_to_200_last_year_in_NJ-
|
290.479 | So where do I FIND them? | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Thu Mar 07 1991 11:38 | 6 |
| On the subject of circuit breakers, any suggestions where I can
find "REAL" ITE circuit breakers (and not the "interchangeable
group" ones) in Southern NH? Ralph Pill carries them, but at a
premium price ($7 single pole, $17 double pole). Since I need
a dozen or so, saving $2 per breaker would be worth the trouble
(how about Spags?).
|
290.480 | | VMSDEV::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Thu Mar 07 1991 12:37 | 12 |
| While it's true that you can beat the inspector, it's often not worth your
while. Some inspectors don't take it personally - we had to do some work to
convince our building inspector that white pine beams would be strong enough if
sized correctly, but after we had convinced him it didn't bother him. On the
other hand, there are inspectors out there that are on a bit of a power trip,
and if you prove him wrong, then he'll be the biggest stickler pain in the butt
that he can possibly be after that.
If you do try to convince him - TRY NICELY - *VERY* NICELY. It is of absolutely
no benefit to you to piss off the inspector.
Paul
|
290.264 | | VMSDEV::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Thu Mar 07 1991 12:43 | 10 |
| re:138
Where did you do this work? I've never seen or heard of anyone using a 300 amp
panel for residential use. I'm not questioning that you did in fact install
them, and I'm no electrician, but I do believe that to say "Most houses have
300 amp service" is untrue. Maybe in some of the half-million dollar houses
with huge air conditioners and jacuzzis, but I think it would be highly out of
the ordinary for a normally-sized house.
Paul
|
290.481 | Be agressive. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Thu Mar 07 1991 14:07 | 9 |
| RE: .9
Be a bit agressive with Ralph Pill. They tried to charge me $6 for ITE
breakers too. In a bulk buy, they should be able to do better. If you
have a problem, let me know. Perhaps if I buy more on the bulk buy
that I did a while ago, I can get the same discount. By the way, I
paid $3.50 for each ITE breaker.
Dan
|
290.265 | Local power co. policy. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Thu Mar 07 1991 14:10 | 10 |
| RE: .139
Yes, the drop for 60A service is smaller than that for 100A or 200A.
What I was saying was that the cable for 100A service and 200A service
is the same. Local power companies will install the larger cable since
it is more cost effective to use one type. Once the 100A service is
installed, an upgrade to 200A service will require only the change of
meter socket, meter, panel, and SEU cables.
Dan
|
290.266 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Thu Mar 07 1991 20:21 | 6 |
| FWIW, there is a label inside the breaker box somewhere that gives the current
rating of the box itself (buss bars, etc). For those wondering if they have
a 300A box or a 200A box (I never heard of 300A for a normal home installation
myself)
-Mike
|
290.267 | | RAVEN1::GHOOPER | Parrotheads Make Great Lovers! | Fri Mar 08 1991 02:09 | 10 |
| It's very common (down South) for houses to be equiped with a
300amp service main so that no upgrades will have to be down. MOST
houses do not use two separate panels in the same house (I think
someone mentioned that a few replies back, one service panel upstairs
and one panel in the basement); everything is ran from one panel with
the appropriate breakers. Also, most house's don't have more than a
"crawl space" under the house and that makes it very difficult to get
to a service panel.
-Hoop-
|
290.268 | Where did you practice electricity? | ODIXIE::RAMSEY | See America Last,Put the Environment 1st | Fri Mar 08 1991 12:26 | 6 |
| .re -1
Can you be a tad more specific. Down South. Where down south. Having
lived south of the mason/dixon line for almost 30 years, I be
interested where this type of construction is taking place. Most all
of the houses I see going up in Atlanta are of the 200 amp variety.
|
290.269 | Prices.. | ESDNI4::FARRELL | Black Pearl Express Trucking, LTD. | Sat Mar 09 1991 14:28 | 9 |
|
I found a Square-D 100amp, 20 circuit panel runs about $50 - $60 total,
last time I was @ the local Electrical Supply Wharehouse. Breakers ran
about $6.00 each,GFI's about $25 each.
/joe
|
290.270 | | RAVEN1::GHOOPER | Parrotheads Make Great Lovers! | Mon Mar 11 1991 01:50 | 10 |
| RE: .144
A "tad" more specific? Upstate South Carolina. I worked with a
couple of electrians for a short while; most the new house had 300amp
mains installed because of the all-electric systems such as: C/A, heat
pump, washer/dryer, range, waterheater, etc. They wanted a system that
would not have to be up-graded and a 300amp main is only a few bucks
more than a 200amp.
-Hoop-
|
290.271 | | SSBN1::YANKES | | Mon Mar 11 1991 13:53 | 8 |
|
Re: .last few concerning 300amp mains
As a side comment, I'd hate to pay the electric bill for any house
that used enough electricity to make upgrading from 200amp service something
to be considered.
-craig
|
290.272 | What's your guess?? | BPOV06::RIDGE | How can I miss U if U wont go away? | Wed Mar 13 1991 16:26 | 6 |
| I have underground utilities to my house. I believe I have 100 amp
service at the breaker panel. Do you think that Boston Edison ran the
right feed to the house to make an upgrade to 200amp simple? I don't
think I would want to dig up the front yard.
Steve
|
290.482 | An additional comment on Mixing | NOVA::GORNEAULT | A Liberal is someone who is not yet emotionally mature. | Wed Mar 13 1991 16:55 | 11 |
|
re .mixing breakers
A while back I was doing some work for GE. They keep their blueprints
specs etc on file for a long time. They had specs for various panels
that went back over 50+ years. These are kept for product liability suits.
So if you were to use a non GE breaker and the your panel burned your
house down, you would have a hard time getting them to settle. At
least that was a reason the GE person gave.
|
290.273 | Utility should know. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Wed Mar 13 1991 17:40 | 7 |
| RE: .-1
I would guess that they ran 4/O tri-plex cable in the conduit. THis
should be enough for a 200A panel. A quick call to the utility should
confirm this.
Dan
|
290.274 | Not large enough cable | KENT::KENT | Peter Kent - SASE, 223-1933 | Thu Mar 14 1991 00:07 | 20 |
| re. .148
I want to do the same thing, but not only is the underground cable good
only for 100 amp (that was to be expected), but also the conduit is too
small to accomodate the larger cable. So, I am faced with having to
put in a new 120 ft. trench from the pole to the meter for the new
conduit.
I have a Square D 100 amp panel and the main breaker is bad - one side
is pitted and there's a crackling sound inside when large amounts of
current are drawn. I wanted to replace the breaker, but good ole
Square D is not only not available everywhere, but they have changed
the breaker such that I have to completely rewire from the meter to the
panel - the wire isn't long enough to bring around for the new style
breaker. So, I'm going to put in 200 amp service and dump Square D. I
want to be able to buy other manufacturer's breakers and I don't want
to have to travel far for them. Also, the Square D panel is very small
inside and doesn't allow enough room for all the wires.
Peter
|
290.275 | do you need a service change or just a new breaker? | DDIF::MCCARTHY | Well Norm, lets go take a look. | Thu Mar 14 1991 10:03 | 18 |
| You will find that most panel makers changed their panels about 10 years or so
ago. The big reason was new requirements for available space in the panel.
You would find the newer Square D to have plenty of space.
When I was going service changes for a living I would save main breaker's and
such from the panels I was replacing for such a case as yours. I don't have an
old Square D sitting around though. You may try advertising for one if the
only reason you are thinking about doing this is that the main breaker is bad
and you don't really need a service change.
If suppliers in your area do not handle Square D, there is nothing you can do
execpt start calling other towns (sounds like you have anyway). I found that
trying to get Cutler-Hammar breakers were very difficult to get ahold of
around the south shore (of MA) but several places handled Square D.
It looks like you have a little digging in front of you :-)
Brian
|
290.276 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Mar 14 1991 13:52 | 8 |
| I called the local electric company for my home (PSNH in Nashua) and
was told that they automatically replaced the feed from the pole when
a service upgrade was performed. There is no charge from them for
doing an upgrade - I just pay the electrician to do the work up
to the meter box. Also, a permit is required in Nashua, but the
electrician generally handles this.
Steve
|
290.53 | Dimmer Wiring Problem | NEMAIL::COLVIN | | Thu Mar 14 1991 14:22 | 72 |
| I have an electrical circuit problem which has been driving me crazy
for the past week.
The house is 8 years old so all wiring is up-to-date. I removed the
large central light fixture in a large kitchen and replaced it with six
recessed high-hats. The old fixture was controlled by two three-way
switches on either side of the kitchen/eating area. The new high-hats
have 150w lamps so I did not want to run them all off the old 3-way. I
wanted to control the six new lights in three pairs, so here is what I
did:
- Installed lights in ceiling, wired in three separate pairs.
- The original 3-way at the main kitchen entrance was in a two-gang box
along with with another 3-way which controls a front-hall light. I
expanded this to a four-gang box to hold the two new dimmers. I used
the original 3-way circuit to control one pair, installing a 3-way
dimmer to allow light intensity control. This works fine.
- I ran a new 14/2 circuit back to the main panel with a new 15A
breaker and brought it into the expanded, four-gang box. This new
circuit is for power for pairs #2 and #3 (#1 pair run off the old
3-way described above, and is completely isolated from #2 and #3).
- I got two new single-pole dimmers and wire-nutted one wire from each
dimmer to the black wire of the new circuit. The other black wire
from each dimmer is wire nutted to the black wire which runs to it's
respective lamp pair. Whites from the new circuit and each of the two
pairs are wire-nutted together, as are the grounds and the grounds
are grounded to a screw on the box.
The box now looks like this (left-to-right):
Dimmer-Pair 3 Dimmer-Pair 2 Dimmer-Pair 1 Hall 3-way Sw
(New Cir.) (New Cir.) (Old 3-Way) (Existing)
Everything worked fine for three weeks. Then my wife said she turned
on dimmer (all are rotaries) for #3 and there was a loud pop and it did
not work any more. All the rest (including #2 on same circuit) work
fine. Breaker did not trip. Dimmer #3 is stuck all the way in.
So I figure I got a bum dimmer and get a replacement. I shut off juice,
install new dimmer, turn on juice, turn #3 on and loud spark sound,
wife notices sparks from back of box (wall open due to other
remodeling) and the new dimmer is history (lights will come on but only
if the dimmer button is held all the way in). Again, the breaker does
not trip and dimmer #2 still works fine. I open box, check for bare
wires, loose wire nuts, etc, find nothing. Put in an old dimmer lying
in junk box, turn it on and a faint click from box and this dimmer
turns on and off fine but will not dim (lights are full on). Again,
all other dimmers and switches work fine.
My theory is that there is a short in the box, on the output side of #3
and that the dimmer is the weak link (I have heard that they are
somewhat fragile) and it may be that the dimmer breaks before the
breaker trips. There are, however, some pieces of evidence which do not
support the theory, like why the two replacement dimmers continue to work
although in crippled mode. I would think that a short would either blow
out the dimmer connection completely or trip the breaker.
I have a new dimmer but, as you can imagine, am reluctant to commit it
to the growing pile of trashed dimmers.
Any ideas? Is my original wiring correct? Each dimmer is rated for 600
watts and only has 300W on it (2 lamps at 150W each. If I can verify
the wiring then I can go looking for shorts. If the wiring is such that
there is some sort of back-feeding going on, why does it only effect
#3?
Thanks in advance for the help.
Regards,
Larry
|
290.54 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Thu Mar 14 1991 19:16 | 10 |
| It sounds very much like there is a short circuit in the wiring of
dimmer-pair-3 (the one the blew).
To check this do the following. Remove the bulbs from both lamps
on this circuit. At the box where the dimmers are, pull out the
wires that lead to this lamps. Check these wires with an ohm meter
or continuity tester. There should NOT be continuity between the
black and white wires. (The ohm meter should show infinite
resistance.) If there IS continuity, trace the circuit looking for
the short. Might you possibly have put a staple in too tight?
|
290.55 | I Will Be Checking | NEMAIL::COLVIN | | Fri Mar 15 1991 11:54 | 17 |
| A short was my theory, as well, but it must be intermittent since the
last dimmer ( which is still in there) now acts as a single-pole switch,
even though it does not dim. If there was a constant short, I would
think it would fry the dimmer completely or blow the breaker.
The staples were the first thing I checked, but there are only two of
them where the wire runs up the stud and both are loose. I did get the
wiring scheme blessed by an electrician, so this weekend I will take
everything apart and check for shorts and/or loose connections. The
electrician said that a loose connection will increase the draw through
the dimmer and it could go out in a blaze of sparks. This was his
guess.
Thanks for the response.
Regards,
Larry
|
290.277 | Not without a fight | FREDW::MATTHES | half a bubble off plumb | Fri Mar 15 1991 11:54 | 14 |
|
I gotta disagree Steve. I had to go beat them up to do it for me. I
went from 1 to 200 amp and they claimed I would never see the
difference in the line. Since I kept claiming that I would, they
finally conceded and upgraded the line.
One caveat: The heavier line is HEAVier! I was not prepared to
replace the screw-in eye bolt for a through-bolt eye hook. fortunately
it was not that big a problem. The lighter duty eye bolt will not hold
the heavier duty cable.
They did it for nothing, but not without a fight.
This is also PSNH in Nashua. circa 1986 or 87 (gad time flies)
|
290.278 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Mar 15 1991 13:32 | 9 |
| Re: .153
All I know is what the rep told me on the phone. The electrician I called
in, though, said that they might not replace it if they thought it was ok.
The electrician I have asked to do my upgrade is using Crouse-Hinds
equipment. Has anyone had problems with this brand?
Steve
|
290.513 | How to supply two houses with one service | MEIS::TOWNSEND | Erik S. Townsend (DTN) 247-2436 | Mon Mar 18 1991 19:22 | 51 |
| I looked under 1111.34 but couldn't find anything on this...
Vacation property has existing cottage (very small - < 300sf) with (I think)
100A service. Its located ideally close to a pole, probably because we paid
(many years ago) to have them put the pole in.
New construction under consideration is about 100' away, and is further
away from the existing pole (i.e existing building sits between pole
and new construction).
Question is: How to get service to both buildings in most sensible way. The
proposed construction will become the main house, and the existing cabin will
then be a guest cottage (or more likely a rental unit!). Thus,
there is no need for two meters. Also, I don't want to pay minimum charge
on two services.
I've previously been through the scenario where the electric company says
"Don't worry - we're here to help - we'll take care of it" then sends a
bill for $1,000. I want to avoid that and do as much as legally possible
myself.
Options seem to be:
1. Upgrade existing service to 200A (maybe not even necessary) and
make the new house's panel a sub-panel of the service already
installed in the small cabin. This appears simplest/easiest/cheapest,
but also seems somewhat "bass-ackwards". The water is definately
going directly (from drilled well) to the new house and will feed
the cabin. To have the electric service work the opposite seems
very strange. Also, if anything gets rented its most likely to
be the cottage. Rental tenants throw a breaker and turn OFF the
house... Not so great.
2. Redirect the service to enter at the new house. This sounds like
paying the elec. co lots of money. Could leave the meter where it
is, and run supply cable to the main panel at the new house, but
the voltage drop (By the time it goes to the new house, through
the panel, and back to the cottage) could be a problem.
3. Split the supply service to enter through two main panels (?) I
don't know if this is even possible - doesn't sound legal without
two meters.
Also note - the current service enters a meter, then a main shutoff
switch, then the existing main breaker panel. Can you turn the main
shutoff switch off, then replace the cold cable (to reroute to house)
without disconnecting the service entirely?
Any ideas/advice/suggestions welcome!
Erik
|
290.514 | been done before | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Mon Mar 18 1991 21:10 | 9 |
| I don't know if this will help you, but a vacation cottage near my father's
cottage was wired like this. A service fed a small guest cabin, and the main
cottage was fed off the guest cabin. This was done, however, a long time
ago, and they've since upgraded the ~60A service to a ~200A feed to the main
house, and the old main house feed feeds the small cabin, and the original
main feed drop, including meter box without meter, now feeds a pole with a light
on it in back.
-Mike
|
290.515 | The way I read NEC | WORDS::DUKE | | Tue Mar 19 1991 10:52 | 28 |
| Erik,
Regarding your stated options -
Making the new house a sub-panel of the old appears to be
contrary to NEC Article 230-84 which requires a disconnect
for each building which is accessible by the tenants. I'll
leave the reading and interpretation to you.
Option two is the reverse of one and therefore seems to
have the same problem.
Option three appears to me to conform to NEC. My NEC is
old. The wording may have changed, but I expect Article 230
is still Services. Read Article 250 also. The grounding of
multiple disconnects may have a wrinkle or two.
Surprisingly, it appears that one meter is not only legal,
but all that is allowed.
As always, the local inspector will be the one to have
the final say. Being possible rental, some will be tougher
than others. Depends entirely upon where you are building.
Regards,
Peter Duke
|
290.516 | Can you treat it like a farm? | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Tue Mar 19 1991 11:02 | 12 |
| You could approach the situation not unlike farm wiring.
At the "final pole" (where your existing small house is fed)
you would install a meter and main disconnect switch. From
that point you feed the panel in each house; the feed to the
new house could be underground. One meter, one bill.
It's been a long time since I read about farm wiring; there
are probably grounding, disconnect, lightning protection, and
other issues which come into play. Check out Richter's "bible"
for some gory details. An electrician experienced in this type
of wiring would be an invaluable aid.
|
290.517 | Federal Pacific Breaker Suppliers? | BOSOX::DIFRUSCIA | I'M THE NRA | Thu Apr 04 1991 15:02 | 7 |
| does anyone one know where I can get a Federal Pacific 220 breaker,
I went to Ralph Pill, and they said good luck in finding one,
since they went out of biusnesss,
Thanks
Tony
|
290.518 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Apr 04 1991 16:18 | 5 |
| Federal Pacific breakers are easy to find. I've seen them at Builder's
Square, Channel and Somerville Lumber. It's the fuse panel inserts which
are hard to locate!
Steve
|
290.519 | Old Federal Pacific parts ... call me .. | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early, Digital Services | Mon Apr 08 1991 12:30 | 18 |
| re: 4179.1 FEDERAL PACIFIC 1 of 1
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>Federal Pacific breakers are easy to find. I've seen them at Builder's
>Square, Channel and Somerville Lumber. It's the fuse panel inserts which
>are hard to locate!
FP Fuse panel inserts ??
What do they look like ?
I may have a few in my barn I could part with.
Bob Early
|
290.520 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Apr 08 1991 14:53 | 7 |
| Where were you when I asked for some in note 1666, Bob? It's too late
now, though - I replaced my fuse panel with a breaker panel, so I too have
some inserts.
Anyway, I've seen Federal Pacific breakers in many stores.
Steve
|
290.521 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Apr 09 1991 12:09 | 4 |
| I was in Builder's Square in Nashua last night, and they had plenty of
FPE breakers on the rack with other brands.
Steve
|
290.522 | Sorry, no RNU then ... How about Post & Tubes ? | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early, Digital Services | Tue Apr 09 1991 14:55 | 11 |
| re: 4179.3 FEDERAL PACIFIC 3 of 3
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>Where were you when I asked for some in note 1666, Bob? It's too late
>now, though - I replaced my fuse panel with a breaker panel, so I too have
I didn't use RNU then. Soryy,
However, do you need any posts or tubes ??
Bob
|
290.523 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Apr 09 1991 15:02 | 5 |
| Re: .5
My house isn't THAT old!
Steve
|
290.524 | | HKFINN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Thu Apr 11 1991 16:52 | 2 |
| You can get Federal Pacific breakers at Maynard Supply on Route 62.
Not cheap though! Bring lots of money....
|
290.101 | 100 --> 200 ?? | KAOFS::M_COTE | It's in the hardcover blue book | Mon Jun 17 1991 12:58 | 41 |
|
We are about to install a new deck in our backyard.With the deck,
a new Hot tub will be installed.The tub will be installed with
a 6KW 1.5hp motor.
The house is ~30 years old.We have decided to replace the service box
with a newer Breaker style.The older fuse type has been filled to the
capacity.The electrician came over to give an estimate of the upgrade.
I had origionally thought that an upgrade to 200 amp would be the way
to go.The electrician looked at the panal and suggested that he could
save us some money by replacing the panal with another 100 amp service
with a 32 slot distribution panal.
He said I would have plenty of amperage left over for years to come.
So I guess I'm looking for peoples thoughts.
I live in a ~1300 sq ft bungalow, with gas furnace,gas water heater.
Our major Items are
New tub 6kw [25amp]to be installed
Stove/self cleaning 30amp
Dryer 30amp[? I'd have to check this]
microwave 650w
fridge
dehumidifier 40pint
washer
rather large stereo
An assortment of other toys[other stereo,tv,couple of computers,
kithen normalties etc...]
With future considerations
Air conditioner
A few baseboards heaters if/when basement is finished.
A 100 amp replacement could be done LIVE, in a few hours,whereas
the 200 amp would require Hydro to replace the incoming service [above
ground feed].The cost difference is about 1/2.The electrician does come
recommended.
Thanks for any feedback
Mike
|
290.102 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jun 17 1991 13:04 | 11 |
| Re: .45
I had my 100 AMP service upgraded to 200 AMP, and it was done "live" (other
than about a half hour of no power) - the power company didn't get involved
until after the entire installation had passed the city inspection.
I would go for the 200 AMP upgrade - it shouldn't cost that much more. I'm
not even sure 32 positions for 100A service is "code". You can have 42
positions maximum with 200A.
Steve
|
290.103 | | ELWOOD::LANE | | Mon Jun 17 1991 14:52 | 4 |
| I second Steve's comment. If you're really planning on any kind of electric
heat in the basement, I'd certainly go 200 amp.
Mickey.
|
290.104 | | CNTROL::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jun 17 1991 19:41 | 3 |
| The electrician who will be doing our upgrade from an old fused 60 amp
service recommends skipping right over 100 amps and going to a 200 amp
service.
|
290.105 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Mon Jun 17 1991 20:27 | 10 |
| I have a house which has an incomplete electrical upgrade. A 100A box with the
old 60A feed. I wish to upgrade the feed. Can I have the line upgraded to
200A and leave the old 100A box (and leave the 100A main breaker) and replace
just the box in the future if needed, or are my choices a 100A main feed and
not replace the box, or 200A main feed and I must replace the box?
If I'm going to upgrade the feed, I want to make it a 200A feed, but I don't
think I can swing a new box at the same time.
-Mike
|
290.106 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jun 17 1991 20:49 | 4 |
| Call your power company - I don't see why you can't get a new feed (and
a new meter box) and update your panel at a later date.
Steve
|
290.107 | My experiences. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Mon Jun 17 1991 22:45 | 19 |
| re: .-2
Assuming that you can do some of the work yourself (replacing the
panel), you can upgrade teh service with little cost. The panel itself
is usually around $125-$150. The meter socket will run you about
$40.00 and the SEU cable about $1.50 per foot. You need to make sure
that the new box is manufactured by the same company as the current
breakers. This kind of upgrade usually does not require an
electrician. But PLEASE be careful when disconnecting the meter. You
will need to wait for the power company to change the meter socket as
the current wires need to be removed and you don't want to do that
live.
I have done a few of this type of upgrade without much trouble. The
key is that if you are not comfortable with working on it, don't!!!
Call for the professional. At the very least, you should be able to
save a few bucks by buying the materials yourself.
Dan
|
290.108 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Tue Jun 18 1991 01:49 | 16 |
| In my case the feed from the box to the meter, the meter socket, the feed from
the socket to the weatherhead and possibly the line from the pole will have to
be replaced. I know the power company has to be involved in most of the above,
I don't really see much for me to do unless I install the meter socket and
feed in advance, get power co's blessing, have them disconnect me, wait around
until I wire the new box in, get their blessing and hook up the new service.
I have no problems with electric wiring, but I'll let someone else do this.
I am debating the need to upgrade the box. I need the feed upgraded (lots
of light flickering, measurable right at the main breaker so the feed is at
fault) but don't need the 200A. I know the incremental cost of the feed and
meter box is low so that definitely goes straight to 200A, but I can't pay
the incremental cost of a 200A over a 100A box, my choice is pay for a 200A
box or keep the 100A box.
-Mike
|
290.109 | summ of the charges | KAOFS::M_COTE | It's in the hardcover blue book | Tue Jun 18 1991 11:05 | 22 |
|
I reread my reply and it seems I failed to make any sense.The tub has
a 6KW heater and a 1.5 Hp motor.
I don't want to get into reactive/inductive load algarithms, I just want
an approxamation of the current I'll be needing.To do this do you just
add the fused value or the actual value.[fused value to give you
a buffer]It seems to make sense that you do not use all our items a
once but I don't want to bet my house on it.
Example.The 6KW heater should draw 25amps but to be fused for 40amps.
So for a good approx do I just add, say...
Dryer 30amp
Stove 30amp
Heater(pool) 40amp
fridge ??
maybe AIR cond. (enough for ~1300sq ft)
...
thanks
|
290.110 | a few questions | CACHE::BEAUREGARD | may the source be with you | Tue Jun 18 1991 11:56 | 20 |
| Questions:
I have a friend that has an older push button style 200 amp breaker
box. He would like to change it over to normal switch type breakers. At
the same time, he would like to relocate the panel to a central
location in the house. I would be helping him, and I am very comfortable
working with electricity. My questions are;
1) what are my liabilities?
2) Am I correct in assuming that I can put a small breaker box at
the service entrance, then install a 150 amp breaker and run
some ?? awg wire over to the new panel location?
3) He's siding the house and has to have the meter pulled. If we
make these changes, will the electric company re-install the
meter or will a licensed electrician have to be present.
Roger
|
290.111 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:14 | 21 |
| re: .54
In answer to your 2nd question, yes you can put a 200 amp breaker at
the service entrance, then run a single large cable to a distribution
box elsewhere.
You can also split the service by having a 200-amp breaker feeding,
say, two 100-amp breakers which feed two 100-amp distribution panels.
That is roughly the setup I have. You just need to have a main
disconnect (and a breaker!) within x feet of the service entrance...I
think the code says "as close as practical" or some such terminology.
It's been a while since I looked at the details, so somebody else more
up-to-date on the code may have better information.
Now, if you do this, you have to do the grounding differently in the
remote distribution panels. You have to keep the ground and neutral
isolated from each other. The *ONLY* place you can tie the ground
and neutral together is at the main breaker. In most houses, this
is also the distribution panel so that is where they get tied together.
With your proposed setup, you can't do that. I think. Maybe somebody
with more detailed knowledge can confirm or deny this.
|
290.112 | Need raw data | MEIS::TOWNSEND | Erik S. Townsend (DTN) 247-2436 | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:24 | 10 |
| Seems to me that the "cost of materials difference" assertions being made
here aren't considering the fact that meter to panel distances vary widely.
I think it would be clearer if somebody were to post a note saying what
gauge (aluminum) wire is needed for 100A, how much it costs per foot, what
gauge is needed for 200A, and how much it costs per foot.
Just a thought...
ET
|
290.113 | Isolated neutral in subpanels | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Tue Jun 18 1991 14:04 | 25 |
| Re .55:
You are correct; any subpanel MUST have a neutral busbar which is
NOT connected to the frame of the panel (i.e., it is an ISOLATED
NEUTRAL). This isn't so bad in and of itself, but it does add a
bit of complexity to a method commonly used when wiring stoves,
ranges, and electric clothes dryers; also, extra cost.
With a main panel where the neutral and grounding busbars are
connected together, the NEC allows use of 2-conductor (with ground)
cable to connect a 240-volt (or 120/240-volt) appliance, such as
a clothes dryer. (There are restrictions on minimum size of the
conductors, etc., which I won't detail here.) The "ground" wire
of the 2-conductor cable is used as both a neutral (groundED) and
groundING conductor. (Some variant of "service entrance cable" is
frequently used in this case.)
When you have a subpanel you CANNOT "cheat" and use 2-conductor
cable; you'll have to go with 3-conductor cable, which will probably
be quite a bit more expensive and harder to locate.
However, you could get around this "kink" by simply running your
240-volt appliances from the main panel. Whether or not this is
more or less expensive depends on length of cable run, whether or
not you can re-use an existing panel, etc., etc.
|
290.114 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Tue Jun 18 1991 19:30 | 18 |
| > I have a friend that ...would like to change ...to a central [pannel]
> ... I would be helping him, and I am very comfortable
> working with electricity. My questions are;
> 1) what are my liabilities?
This depends on the state and locality. In some places, like Mass
and some citis in NH, you MUST be licensed to do electical work.
In this case what you're doing would be illeagal.
In other localities, like much of NH, a homeowner is allowed to do
electrical work on his own residence. If you could reasonably
argue that your friend is doing the work and you're just helping
I'd think that you'd be O.K., provided that your friend gets the
neede permits, etc.
Also, if you accept any compensatin for your "help" your liability
increases greatly.
|
290.115 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jun 18 1991 19:56 | 5 |
| If you do the work yourself, be sure to get a permit. If you don't, you may
find your insurance company turns unfriendly if you ever file a claim that
is related to the wiring.
Steve
|
290.116 | yes or no | CACHE::BEAUREGARD | may the source be with you | Wed Jun 19 1991 11:36 | 13 |
| I seem to remember somewhere in this notes file, that somebody said it
is no longer legal to do your own wiring. Well, I called the building
inspector's office in the town of question and inquired as to what
permits were required for relocating the service panel. I was asked if
I was a licensed electrician and said no. The person on the other end
then said "oh, your the homeowner, Just get the permit and when
finished, have the electrical inspector sign it off". I asked directly
"so I can do the wiring and then just get it inspected?" The reply was
yes. So, what up? Can you or can't you do all/some electrical work in
MA?
Roger
|
290.117 | It depends | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Wed Jun 19 1991 11:55 | 8 |
| Re .60 and electrical work in MA:
Again, IT DEPENDS ON THE TOWN. Some towns will let the homeowner
do the work, some won't; any such restrictions are purely the
decision of the town.
This is different from plumbing work in MA; you MUST be a licensed
plumber to pull a permit. This restriction is defined by the state.
|
290.118 | It makes sense that they are electricians, but... | MARX::SULLIVAN | We have met the enemy, and they is us! | Wed Jun 19 1991 15:33 | 12 |
| > Re .61
>
> Again, IT DEPENDS ON THE TOWN. Some towns will let the homeowner
> do the work, some won't; any such restrictions are purely the
> decision of the town.
And, since in many towns (like mine), the inspector is also a licensed,
practicing, electrician, where do you think they lean as far as supporting
homeowner work? :-)
Mark
|
290.119 | will it work? | CACHE::BEAUREGARD | may the source be with you | Wed Jun 19 1991 17:56 | 25 |
| Well, we'll see what happens.
Question:
Since moving the panel is probably more than a days work,
what do think about the following plan of action?
First, install the new remote panel at the new location. Then feed
this panel from the old panel using a 30 amp breaker and appropriate wire.
This would be a temporary connection. Now, wire up the lighting and
outlet ckts to the new panel. Take as much time (days) as needed to wire up
these ckts since the power to the house will not be affected. After
all these ckts are connected, disconnect the 30 amp feed, connect all
the high power stuff to the new remote panel (dryer,range...) and remove the
old service entrance panel. Install the new service entrance panel, run
the appropriate feed wire from the entrance panel to the remote panel, get
the okie dokie from the local inspectors, connect up the entrance panel
and your done. Since the 30 amp feed is only temporary it should
service the lights and plugs for a week or so, yes/no?
Roger
|
290.120 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Wed Jun 19 1991 18:05 | 11 |
| re .63:
these ckts since the power to the house will not be affected. After
all these ckts are connected, disconnect the 30 amp feed, connect all
the high power stuff to the new remote panel (dryer,range...) and remove the
^^^^^^^^^^^
Be sure to read .57 before doing this. You may have to leave them on the
main panel or rewire them.
-Mike
|
290.530 | Should big breakers (50A) go at the top? | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Oct 01 1991 13:26 | 7 |
| I was discussing adding a 240v 50amp breaker to my electrical panel.
I have some open slots and would simply add it to the existing box.
My friend said that the big boys go at the top. Is this so and
what is the reason for it? Should I rearrange my circuit panel
so that the little breakers are on the bottom and the big ones
are on the top?
|
290.531 | Only if you're hung up on hierarchy | JVAX::JOHNSON | | Tue Oct 01 1991 14:29 | 15 |
| Any restrictions on the location of breakers would have to be described
on warning labels inside the box, or provided for by automatic
prevention of misinstallation by the presence of keys. These
provisions would be necessary for UL approval of the box. I have
never run into such restrictions, nor can I think of good reasons
for them to exist.
You should have no trouble placing the breaker in any available
space. You are likely to generate problems moving all the breakers
and wiring to put the breaker at the top.
I think you will find the only reason the big breakers are at the
top is that they are the first to be added, while there is plenty
of working room in the box for heavier gauge wires. The smaller
more flexible circuits are added later.
|
290.532 | | SUBWAY::SAPIENZA | Knowledge applied is wisdom gained. | Tue Oct 01 1991 14:47 | 10 |
|
Your friend may be thinking about a style of breaker box which reserves
a cutout at the top of the front panel for the main breaker, with
smaller cutouts in the rest of the panel. In this style of box, the
"big" breaker is always at the top.
However, as stated in the previous reply, there's no sane reason for
rearranging breakers to place higher current switches near the top of
the front panel.
|
290.533 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Oct 01 1991 15:11 | 7 |
| Thanks! Now all I have to worry about is wrestling an 8 gusge wire
into the box down to the bottom where the breaker will be.
Hmmm. I wonder if there are any bottom holes? (We're talking
having enough knowledge to be dangerous! ;-) I wired my basement
with some sound advice. No fires, yet.) It's the big wires
that worry me.
|
290.534 | #8 and 50 amps????? | SASE::DUKE | | Wed Oct 02 1991 09:16 | 8 |
|
> Thanks! Now all I have to worry about is wrestling an 8
> gusge wire into the box down to the bottom where the breaker
> will be.
Number 8 and 50 Amp breaker is not a match. I believe 50
amps needs # 6.
|
290.535 | ampacity depends | JVAX::JOHNSON | | Thu Oct 03 1991 15:50 | 10 |
| It depends on the cable type. Ampacities are:
AWG NM (non-metallic) SE (service entrance)
UF (underground feeder) USE (underground service entrance)
#8 40 amps 50 amps
#6 55 amps 65 amps
See code table 310-16 and clauses 240-3, 336-26.
So you can be in trouble with a #8 NM or UF cable.
On the other hand SE cable is often used for ranges.
|
290.536 | 6 guage - but thanks for the esoterica - I'd like to learn it myself someday. | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Oct 03 1991 16:12 | 11 |
| Being a dolt (got any dolt meters, fellas?) in electricity, I'll rely on the
field service man who told me that I must use 6 guage wire with a 50 amp
breaker. I'll do as I am told in this regard. The wire will be hard
wired to a GFI switch on the pump inside the unit.
I can put the breaker in and install the wire myself (ZZzzzt!~).
But with the price of 6 guage, I want to measure pretty accurately
and get only enough extra to "be sure" I have enough to go where I
want it.
How tough could this be, right? (ZZzzzt!~) ;-)
|
290.596 | Corroded breaker | HELIX::HOLTORF | | Tue Oct 22 1991 16:21 | 5 |
| We had a similar problem to that mentioned in the original
note. Turned out to be a corroded breaker. It took a close inspection
and good lighting(not typical of what you find in the average celler)
to see it.
Mary
|
290.460 | An annoyance problem that I'd like to finally solve... | SASE::SZABO | You're damn right, I got the Blues | Wed Nov 13 1991 14:00 | 19 |
| I've been living with this annoyance [no, not my wife! :-)] ever since
we moved into our brand-new house 4.5 years ago. The FM stations that
I preset on my stereo receiver get wiped out on an average of about
once every 10 days. However, nothing else with any sort of a
programmed setting is affected- nothing. I realize some items such as
vcr's and clock radios maintain their presets for a short period of
time (a couple minutes to a half hour) during power outages, so these
items are unaffected by this problem. So, obviously (I think!), my
house somehow loses power for just an instant, and intermittently.
And, btw, this same stereo receiver never lost it's presets, except
during noticable outages, before in my previous home.
Any thoughts on this, and maybe a cheap `symptomatic' cure?
Thanks,
John
P.S. Could it be that it's not a momentary outage, but maybe a spike
that's causing this?
|
290.461 | There may be a switch on your stereo... | WMOIS::FERRARI_G | | Wed Nov 13 1991 15:01 | 13 |
| We had the same problem with our stereo a few years ago...every week
or so, all presets would be history. The stereo was just a couple of
months old, so I brought it back to the store, where the "salesman/
technician" showed me a little button or switch on the receiver that
had to be either on or off to hold its preset stations. Once I flicked
that switch over, I haven't had a problem since. (It's a Mitsubishi,
if that matters.) I'll try to look at the manual or stereo and get the
name/location of the switch. It may have been shifted during the move.
|
290.462 | Battery Backup? | WHEELR::WESTMORELAND | | Thu Nov 14 1991 12:02 | 2 |
| Also check to see if it uses battery backup could just need
replacement. Rob.
|
290.463 | Bad power in town? | CARROL::CASEY | | Fri Nov 15 1991 10:19 | 18 |
| <<< Note 4107.7 by SASE::SZABO "You're damn right, I got the Blues" >>>
-< An annoyance problem that I'd like to finally solve... >-
Let me guess, you live in Haverhill right?
I live in Haverhill and I have the same problem...every few days I come
home and :
VCR clock is blinking
Microwave clock is reset
Also, It seems we lose power in every little storm that happens to pass
by.
It is really annoying.
Mark
|
290.464 | Unstable power | CIMNET::MOCCIA | | Fri Nov 15 1991 11:17 | 20 |
| Re .10
I live in the better part of Haverhill, also called Atkinson NH
(local joke for you non-Merrimack Valley dudes) and we suffer the same
problem with a different distribution company. Seems the electricity
doesn't know where the state line is located.
I solved the problem of digital clocks resetting with every flicker,
although I did it by accident. We have lots of momentary spikes, so
the computer, stereo, and microwave oven are plugged into noise/surge
suppressors. I don't know hwy, being an I.E. and not an E.E., but it
solved the problem of unwanted resetting of the digital clock/timers.
Incidentally, the power companies monitor this activity closely. Last
time our appliances went screwy, I called and asked if any recent
surges or brownouts had occurred. They called back with the date,
time, duration, and voltage level; helpful in diagnosis.
PBM
|
290.465 | | SASE::SZABO | I wanna party with ewe! | Fri Nov 15 1991 15:21 | 21 |
| Great guess! I do live in Haverhill, in the Ward Hill section of
Bradford, to be exact. (Love that crack about Atkinson being the
better part of Haverhill!).
Actually, I have no complaint whatsoever about power outages. Having
previously lived in Lowell for a better part of 15 years, Haverhill is
a blessing (in more ways than one! No offense, Lowellites :-)). For
instance, when `Bob' hit, we lost power for about an hour whereas other
towns were out for days. Also, the residents of parts of Chelmsford
and Tewksbury *know* what real power outages are... :-)
Anyway, back to the problem with my stereo resets. What's strange is
that I'm not seeing this problem on my clock radio or vcr, the only
other electronics that I have with presets. But, thanks for the noise
supressor suggestion, I'll try it...
Is there a such thing as a whole-house noise/surge supressor that's
hooked up in/on the main?
Thanks again,
John
|
290.466 | Check out all leads! | WRKSYS::SCHWARTZ | | Fri Nov 15 1991 15:52 | 7 |
|
Also check your power plug to the system. If it has been abused, it
might have the prongs pinched so to speak making it intermittant
when large trucks pass by on the street. Just wiggle it while it's
plugged in and if it feels loose in the socket then take the proper
action. This happened to me last summer. It should go in tight into
the socket. I have also heard of the socket going bad as well.
|
290.467 | Internal Flicker Causes? | JOKUR::JOKUR::FALKOF | | Fri Nov 15 1991 17:57 | 10 |
| Now, my problem is that my lights flicker when I turn on the washing
machine, dryer, or anything that has a high current surge. On some
circuits, turning on a light flicks other lights.
My house is about 26 years old, some sockets have 2 prongs, others have
3, but I don't know about the actual wiring because a previous owner
had a 'handy-man' for a father-in-law and another owner did many
el-cheapo patches. I will reserve stories about them for another note.
Any comments/suggestions?
|
290.468 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Mon Nov 18 1991 22:55 | 10 |
| I had a simular problem just recently. Switching on anything caused the
lights to slightly brighten for an instant then dim. I checked every
connection I could think of (over reaction based on wireing problem a
few months ago..) the problem turned out to be a loose neutral
connection at the power pole. The power compant came out respliced the
line and everything has been fine since.
-j
|
290.469 | Not necessarily a problem... | JUNCO::CASSIDY | Mission: Repair with care. | Thu Dec 19 1991 04:03 | 32 |
|
I used to have that probelm with the stereo presets erasing
every week or so in Worcester, but never with anything else. I
moved to Northboro and the problem went away. The stereo can be
unplugged for a few seconds without losing anything (but not so
with the clock on the microwave). That leads me to believe the
problem was surge related (wimpy electronics!).
With the flickering due to a sudden load (such as a washing
machine), that could be difficult to find. Somewhere in your
wiring might be a less than perfect connection and this would be
somewhat resistive. There will always be some voltage drop at
such a junction.
When there is in increased demand for current, as in a motor
kicking in, the increase of current through this junction will
increase the voltage drop across it. The more things that dim,
the closer to the source (line) the junction lies.
Anyone for ohms law? E = I x R Say the resistance (R) at
the junction is 2 ohms and the current surge (I) is 10 amps.
With those numbers, the voltage drop (E) at the junction equals
20 Volts. If your feed voltage is 110 Volts, all your loads
will now recieve 110V - 20V = 90 Volts; a drop of nearly 20%.
If the flickering is very mild, it shouldn't be a problem;
there's always some resistance in normal wiring. If it grows
progressively worse, you could have a bad connection somewhere.
This could cause some mild arcing which would build up carbon
deposits which would make the connection more resistive which
would increase the voltage drop... and so on. It could be some-
thing as pathetic as a loose screw or wirenut (can you say hack
job?!?).
Tim
|
290.279 | Need advice from armchair electricians... | MAY21::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MLO5-5/E71,223-4663,ESB | Tue Dec 31 1991 16:22 | 88 |
| I've read through this topic, and I've read through an "interpretation"
of the NEC which was very good. Only thing is, this interpretation was
written as a textbook for _serious_ electricians. Lots of neat
pictures of connectors for wires as big as my arm, and advice about
lighting setups that would make the Metropolitan Opera jealous...
Now I'm looking for practical advice from you sage, experienced DIYers.
Situation:
30 year old ranch, 100 amp service to a panel with 24 "poles", if
the numbered labels indicate poles.
The box seems to me to be full. The main breaker occupies the upper
right portion of the cutouts. The upper left portion appears to be
"unfillable", since the knockouts are gone but no breakers are
there. (Those of you who haven't caught on yet -- I bought this
place from "the happy-go-lucky DIYer from h*ll").
I have mapped my circuits, and they a mess -- a chocolate mess.
About half the house runs from one 15 A circuit. The rest of the
panel runs to kitchen appliances, with wiring carefully arranged
so that every appliance and outlet is combined in some way to
violate current code...
I have gutted a room due to termites, water damage, lack of headers,
missing ceiling joists, rotten sheathing... oh, did I mention the
carpenter ants? While I'm here, I figure I should do away with the
wire octopus in the attic and run a new circuit to the outlets.
The only trouble is how to do this cost-effectively when, to my
untrained eye, there seems to be no room left in the box.
My guesses:
If I wanted to do things right, I could:
A. Have a bigger panel (200A with lots of space) installed. Big
bucks for the electrician.
B. Do the same myself (should my wife divorce me before or after
I start? I figure after, since she might be able to collect
on my life insurance...) Big bucks for the hotel bills when
I do it wrong, and for the Lloyd's of London rewrite of my
homeowner's insurance.
C. Replace one of the lunker 240V/30A kitchen breakers with a feed
to a subpanel located near the kitchen. How big should a
kitchen subpanel be? Can it be 100A if the main panel is 100A?
Is 60A enough with electric stove, oven, and D/W? Currently
the stove and oven are each on 240/30, and the D/W is on 15.
Someday if I have money, I'd like to take the D/W off of the
circuit which feeds the light over the sink, all three counter
outlets, and the refrigerator (I think it's 15A :-).
D. Sell the house. Sorry, momentary loss of sanity. I can't
afford to sell my house...
If I wanted to defer the pain, I could:
A. Try to split the furnace breaker with two "slimlines." There
are currently a lot of slimlines in the panel, and many of them
are in single-numbered "slots", for instance slot 20 has two
20A breakers. The furnace is 120V 15 amp, but uses a "big"
breaker. Are there rules which require the big breaker, or
rules which would make use of slimlines high in the box
invalid?
B. Remove the outlet which is at eye level on the one kitchen wall
which doesn't have (and never could have) a counter, which is
wired with unmarked wire to a 15A fuse, and fitted with a 20A
receptacle. Is the inspector going to be mad that I "took the
kitchen further from code" by removing a useless outlet, and
then used up that slot on the panel?
Another note:
When I look inside the panel, the busses are terminated by loops with
set screws in them. Were these intended as service entrances when the
panel is used as a subpanel? Is it possible to get rid of the main
breaker in the box, install an external main breaker, and use the slots
freed up in the box?
I am going to call an electrician for estimates and suggestions. But I
have been burned by too many MA tradesmen (mainly mechanics) to fully
trust that I will be given the most cost-effective advice. I want to
get some off-the-cuff advice so that I can ask pseudo-intelligent
questions when the electrician is there...
|
290.280 | We added another box. | GIAMEM::LAMPROS | | Tue Dec 31 1991 16:55 | 11 |
|
Re -1.
My electrician added another 60 amp box under the main 100
amp box. He put a 60 amp breaker in the main box with heavy guage
wires, don't remember the guage wires, from the 60 amp breaker to the
added 60 amp box. This gave me 20 more available slots. We then started
splitting up circuits to better balance the lines.
Bill
|
290.281 | | FSDB45::FEINSMITH | Politically Incorrect And Proud Of It | Tue Dec 31 1991 19:21 | 3 |
| I think that 60 amp is 4 guage wire.
Eric
|
290.282 | | SSDEVO::JACKSON | Jim Jackson | Wed Jan 01 1992 18:15 | 7 |
| 60 amps -> 6 gauge copper
50 amps -> 8 gauge copper, depending upon wire type. Consult your code
book.
When I put in a 50 amp subpanel, I just went for the three feet of 6 gauge
copper.
|
290.283 | Yeah, its a nasty bill, but one that I'll pay. | SSBN1::YANKES | | Thu Jan 02 1992 12:50 | 32 |
|
Re: .155
> there. (Those of you who haven't caught on yet -- I bought this
> place from "the happy-go-lucky DIYer from h*ll").
Rule number 1 that I'd follow -- don't do something that a future
owner will look back on and put you into this same DIYer category... :-)
> C. Replace one of the lunker 240V/30A kitchen breakers with a feed
> to a subpanel located near the kitchen. How big should a
> kitchen subpanel be? Can it be 100A if the main panel is 100A?
> Is 60A enough with electric stove, oven, and D/W? Currently
> the stove and oven are each on 240/30, and the D/W is on 15.
> Someday if I have money, I'd like to take the D/W off of the
> circuit which feeds the light over the sink, all three counter
> outlets, and the refrigerator (I think it's 15A :-).
If you're feeding this subpanel off a 30A line, I doubt that you could
make the subpanel's main be 100A. Even if it is to code, you won't get any
benefit from the 100A breaker since the 30A will trip first at your main box.
But, lets look at this differently -- adding up your current items the
kitchen alone can take down 75A of power and your main breaker is only 100A.
This sounds "tight" to me. I'm in a similiar situation of having only a 100A
box, and eventually I'm going to upgrade this to 200A to give me more capacity -
and I don't even have an electric stove/oven like you do. Will I do this
myself? Nah. I'm a good DIYer, but the thought of changing panels gives me
the willies. This is one area that I'll, perhaps not happily but at least
willingly, pay the electrician's bill.
-craig
|
290.284 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Fri Jan 03 1992 00:06 | 6 |
| re.155
Hey I know that guy or at least I know where he used to live before I
bought it. 8^)
-j
|
290.285 | Read up, plan carefully, and DIY | JUPITR::COOMBS | | Fri Jan 03 1992 14:23 | 37 |
| I recently upgraded my 60 amp glass fused to a 200 amp/30 slot panel.
I got quotes from 3 electricians to do the work and got $ from 850
to 1100. In the end, I bought a book at spags for $3.00, filed a
permit with the town, asked the electric company to disconnect the house
in the morning, and scheduled a reconnect for that afternoon.I was very
happy with the outcome.
The inspector gave me rations of S**t about how I couldn't do it
myself, and how he needed to see my "plans" before he would give me the
permit. He was very intimidating. I went home, wrote down the
suggestions from my book, listed the materials I was going to use, went
back again and expressed my confidence that I was capable of doing the
work. He then gave me a permit with no problem.
The material list was easy since the counterperson at the Square D
distributor in Worcester walked me through the whole process.
I rewired from the mast head outside the house. Things to watch are,
Wire size down from the mast, wire size from the meter to the 200
panel, ground wire size from panel to an 8 ft copper ground rod (not
the water pipe which may be the way your house currently is wired). The
counterperson knew just what I needed and explained all my choices.
If I remember right, I think the whole job cost me under $500 and took
only 5-6 hours. That included a new meter box which was not in the
quotes I got. The only thing the inspector checked for was whether I
used oxidation retarding ointment on the aluminum wire connections at
the meter box and where it connected to the panel.
The whole job seemed a bit intimidating until I decided that with a
little reading, a bit of planning for time and order of events, I could
save a large amount of money. I would recommend it for a DIY if you
have a resonable amount of experience wiring only outlets, lights, etc
and are willing to read and follow instructions before starting the
job.
Bryan
|
290.286 | some comments on .155 | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Wed Jan 08 1992 15:57 | 73 |
| Some comments on .155 (I think that's the number):
> A. Have a bigger panel (200A with lots of space) installed. Big
> bucks for the electrician.
>
> B. Do the same myself
The problem with this is that your house has no power from the time you
start until the time you end. My DIY projects always take a lot longer
than I expected. Lack of organization, I suppose. But I know I wouldn't
want my house without power from when I started until I completed a
somewhat complex and unfamiliar project.
> C. Replace one of the lunker 240V/30A kitchen breakers with a feed
> to a subpanel located near the kitchen. How big should a
> kitchen subpanel be? Can it be 100A if the main panel is 100A?
> Is 60A enough with electric stove, oven, and D/W? Currently
> the stove and oven are each on 240/30, and the D/W is on 15.
> Someday if I have money, I'd like to take the D/W off of the
> circuit which feeds the light over the sink, all three counter
> outlets, and the refrigerator (I think it's 15A :-).
Yes, the subpanel can be 100A. If you did that, I don't think you'd need
a breaker on that line in the main panel -- of course, you do have to
connect *after* the main breaker in the main panel. I think a remote
subpanel has to have its own cutoff, but small 100A panels are fairly
cheap. This has the advantage that you can do it yourself, disconnecting
just one circuit at a time, and only long enough to transfer the wire.
You put up the new panel, run the 100A wire, then take out one of the
kitchen circuits, connect it to the new box, etc.
> If I wanted to defer the pain, I could:
>
> A. Try to split the furnace breaker with two "slimlines." There
> are currently a lot of slimlines in the panel, and many of them
> are in single-numbered "slots", for instance slot 20 has two
> 20A breakers. The furnace is 120V 15 amp, but uses a "big"
> breaker. Are there rules which require the big breaker, or
> rules which would make use of slimlines high in the box
> invalid?
I have never found anything in the code regarding slimlines vs. big
breakers. I think it just says that the panel box and breakers have to be
UL listed, or something like that. If the slimlines can be used at all,
they can be used interchangably with the big ones. I think.
> B. Remove the outlet which is at eye level on the one kitchen wall
> which doesn't have (and never could have) a counter, which is
> wired with unmarked wire to a 15A fuse, and fitted with a 20A
> receptacle. Is the inspector going to be mad that I "took the
> kitchen further from code" by removing a useless outlet, and
> then used up that slot on the panel?
You must have an outlet within 6' of every point along every wall section
that is 2' or more wide. I thought an outlet at eye level didn't count.
Your inspector may demand a floor level outlet on that wall, but I don't
see that taking out the eye level one makes the kitchen any less compliant.
> Another note:
>
> When I look inside the panel, the busses are terminated by loops with
> set screws in them. Were these intended as service entrances when the
> panel is used as a subpanel? Is it possible to get rid of the main
> breaker in the box, install an external main breaker, and use the slots
> freed up in the box?
I don't know what you mean by loops with set screws. However, I'm sure
you cannot use the main breaker slots for anything else. You could check
it out by removing the front cover of your panel. Power down first, of
course.
Luck,
Larry
|
290.287 | Some slimlines are allowed up t a limit. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Thu Jan 09 1992 09:44 | 9 |
| RE: .162
Laryy,
The restriction around the "slimlines" is indirect. There is a maximum
number of circuits allowed per panel. Using too many slimlines would
allow you to exceed this maxzimum.
Dan
|
290.288 | Service upgrade "trick" | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Thu Jan 09 1992 10:28 | 49 |
| I'm sure someone has already mentioned (in some reply somewhere)
a neat "trick" for upgrading an existing low-capacity service.
The "trick" is to install a new (higher capacity) panel in close
proximity to the existing one, and connect the existing panel to
the new panel, treating the existing panel as a sub-panel.
Roughly, you'd obtain all the materials (panel, possibly a new
meter box, new service head, service entrance cable or conduit
and cable, etc.) before starting. Early in the day, have the
service drop to the house disconnected. Install the new panel
and either re-wire the existing meter box/service head or install
new equipment (depends on the capacity of the existing equipment).
Install a 2-pole breaker in the new panel, and feed the existing
panel from this breaker. Have the works inspected, and have a
new service drop connected from the pole. This can usually be
completed easily in a day; the only problems are timings of the
disconnection, inspection, and re-connection. You can speed up
the process by pre-installing ground rods, new panel, etc.
Presto, you now have a new high-capacity panel with all of your
existing circuits still usable. At your leisure you can re-wire,
re-connect, etc., existing circuits, moving them from the old
panel to the new panel. You don't HAVE to move them, but from
the replies here it sounds like you would want to.
There ARE a few "gotchas" to this route. First, the existing
panel MUST have a means of isolating the neutral bus from the
metal enclosure of the panel. The entrance panel MUST have the
neutral and ground busses tied together; in a sub-panel the
neutral and ground busses MUST be isolated from each other. The
sub-panel will require four conductors for connection to the new
main panel; 2 hot, 1 grounded (neutral), 1 grounding.
Second, any high-capacity electrical appliances (such as ranges,
and clothes dryers) which use 3-conductor cable (counting any
GROUNDING conductor) MUST be moved to the NEW entrance panel.
(The NEC allows combining the neutral (GROUNDED) and ground
(GROUNDING) conductors in such applications; there are several
specifics as to conductor size, etc. One restriction is that
this is only permitted when connecting to a main panel.)
Third, if you plan on moving circuits from the old panel to the
new, you might want to try to use the same brand of panel so you
don't have to buy new breakers.
This isn't intended as a step-by-step nor have all the gotchas
been covered.
|
290.289 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Jan 09 1992 13:42 | 3 |
| I believe the maximum number of circuits in a panel is 42.
Steve
|
290.525 | electic meter problems?? | AIDEV::HOLLAND | Life's A Breeze | Wed Feb 26 1992 12:47 | 23 |
|
Electrical meter question..
My mother lives on the cape, and her house is all electric.
I'm going over her electeric bills for the past three month
and her kwh is
nov 2224
dec 2175
jan 2836 (she was gone from 12/21-1/20)
any explanations.. house is 4 years old, adn while she was gone
all was shut off. and does anyone know if these kwh's seem high?
for a single person.. house is pretty tight, and she only
heats a section of it in the winter. But the jan period,
she wasn't even there
could the meter be bad??
any advice.
|
290.526 | Actual vs Estimated Readings | CACHE::BEAUREGARD | | Wed Feb 26 1992 13:37 | 7 |
| Ha!, I just got off the phone with the electric company regarding the
same thing. Apparently, my December reading was ESTIMATED not ACTUAL.
The January number actually represents the useage for Jan as well as
the delta between the estimated and actual useage for Dec. I suspect
you are experiencing the same.
Roger
|
290.527 | Heat turned off? | HDECAD::THOMAS | Stop, look and listen | Thu Feb 27 1992 12:25 | 2 |
| Also, I would assume she didn't turn off the electric heat altogether
or all the water pipes would freeze.
|
290.528 | | AIDEV::HOLLAND | Life's A Breeze | Thu Feb 27 1992 15:52 | 3 |
|
heat was left at 40deg...
|
290.529 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Feb 27 1992 15:57 | 5 |
| If it's not an estimated reading that's off (the electric company didn't know
your mother was away, so they based their estimate on the temperature),
and it's not a bad meter, somebody could be stealing electricity. This isn't
too likely (usually thieves steal it before the meter), but it's possible
(assuming she doesn't live in a detached house).
|
290.647 | What cable gauge do I need? | ROYALT::MOEDER | Charlie Moeder DTN 235-8502 | Tue Mar 17 1992 15:47 | 30 |
| What gauge wire is needed for 100A service (if this is answered
elsewhere, a vector please as I couldn't find it).
I want to upgrade from 60A (or less - it's old) to 100A.
Someone told me I need 2-3 cable (copper) but the shop where I
went showed me a cable that is 1 1/2" in diameter. Seems like it
ought to be good for 200A or more.
Anyone know that cable sizes I need for segment 1 and for segment 2
(see the chart below)?
How would this change if I go to aluminum?
Thanks in advance, Charlie.
Wall
Outside | Inside
|
+-------+ | +------------+ +--------------+--
| | | | | | +--
| meter +--x-------------+ Disconnect +-------------+ Distribution +--
| | | (segment 1) | (100A) | (segment 2) | +--
+-------+ | +------+-----+ +--------------+--
| |
|
To water pipe (ground)
|
290.648 | Service Entrance Cable | BROKE::ROWLANDS | | Tue Mar 17 1992 17:39 | 10 |
|
for a 100 amp service you need a 2 guage aluminum (4/0 Aluminum for 200
amp).
The wire most often used for a 100 amp service is a SEU 2-3. This is
that flat grey wire that has 2 insulated conductors and a bare ground. This
usually runs down the house, through the meter, and into the panel.
|
290.649 | don't forget to use the anti-oxident | BROKE::ROWLANDS | | Tue Mar 17 1992 17:43 | 10 |
|
When making the connections with the aluminum wire in the meter,
panel.... don't forget to use the anti-oxident gel. It is
available at an electrical supply house and is needed to prevent the exposed
aluminum from oxidizing.
Dave
|
290.650 | Aluminum is cheaper... | STRATA::CASSIDY | Aspiring conservationist | Wed Mar 18 1992 09:13 | 22 |
|
Someone told me I need 2-3 cable (copper) but the shop where I
went showed me a cable that is 1 1/2" in diameter. Seems like it
ought to be good for 200A or more.
How would this change if I go to aluminum?
Copper is a better conductor than aluminum. You need to
use a larger diameter aluminum wire to carry the same current.
Aluminum also has a different coefficient of expansion
than copper (higher?). If you connect an aluminum wire into a
copper fitting, it can distort the fitting and loosen up after
a few changes in temperature. The looser it gets, the more
resistive it will get. This will generate heat and the hotter
it gets, the more it will expand which will make it looser...
and so on.
Incorrectly matched wires and fittings have the potential
of becoming problems down the road so it's good to do your
Home_work first.
Tim
|
290.651 | 100 to 200 amps | PCOJCT::MILBERG | born 162 days too late | Thu Mar 19 1992 02:10 | 10 |
| Since the 'standard' today seems to be 200 amp service, why not go to
200 amp rather than 100 amp? The difference in cost may not be that
much.
Also, when we upgraded, there was the choice of service cable down the
side of the house or conduit. We went with the conduit and copper.
Cost was about $100 more to a total of $750.
-Barry-
|
290.290 | Are splices permitted inside the breaker box? | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Wed Jul 01 1992 17:48 | 27 |
| [Mods: Please move this if there's a note that fits it better.]
There was a GFCI in a box bolted to the bottom of the breaker box in my
cellar; this protects a pair of outside outlets, and outlets in the
baths. Its location (chest-high) fit poorly with the other outlets in
the finished areas of the cellar, so I moved it.
Since it was bolted to the breaker box, the line heading downstream
from the GFCI simply ran through the breaker box. Since it wasn't long
enough to reach down an additional 3 feet or so, I cut myself two short
lengths of wire for the "input" and "output" of the GFCI, and tied the
"output" to the line going out to the protected circuits, using wire
nuts.
Then it occured to me to wonder: does the electrical code permit
connecting wires together inside the breaker box? I understand that
connections must be inside a box, and the box accessible; I'm
wondering if there's some other concern that makes the breaker box
unsuitable for this purpose.
If it is, I can install a box nearby, replace the "load" or "output"
connection from the GFCI with a suitable length of cable, and re-run
the protected line to the new box -- but I'd like to know whether this
is necessary (or even "not necessary but recommended") before I start
taping and mudding the wall around the breaker box...
Dick
|
290.573 | PSNH/NE Utilities Hookup Fees | AKOCOA::SELIG | | Thu Jul 02 1992 13:39 | 14 |
| FYI.....re: PSNH and NE Utilities
As a result of the recent merger of PSNH and NE Utilities, the hookup
fees for new service have skyrocketed.
We recently had underground service installed for the length of a
150' driveway. The site excavator had tranched the driveway and
layed plastic conduit for the service line......so PSNH was just
snaking the wire that they provided. The utility pole was
pre-exisiting for service to neighboring lots. The builder had
originally told us the PSNH hook charge was under UNDER $1./ft. if
there was no site work involved.
The PSNH bill was for $485 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
|
290.574 | PSNH Underground Service Costs | AKOCOA::SELIG | | Thu Jul 02 1992 13:58 | 10 |
| re: .9
Effective Feb. '92 PSNH chasnged their billing rates for new
installation. They previously shared the expense 50/50 with the new
customer. Now under new accounting policies instated by NE Utilities,
100% of the cost is passed onto the consumer. For underground hookup
the fees are as follows:
Undewrground hookup (site contractor trenches and lays conduit) $205
Service Cable ................................................ $1.22/ft
|
290.291 | try this | GIAMEM::RIDGE | the trouble w/you is the trouble w/me | Thu Jul 02 1992 15:34 | 8 |
| Dick,
I don't think you can do that. One work around would be to move the
outlet to a spot a couple of feet upstream fom it's existin location.
Run the existing wires to the new outlet location, then run a new
short wire to the panel. You have moved the wire connections from the
panel to the outlet, which is acceptable.
Steve
|
290.292 | Resolution: Re-routed wires to an ordinary box. | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Tue Jul 07 1992 13:29 | 14 |
| .166, .167:
Got impatient while my father was around to assist with the wallboard
that would enclose the area in question, so I yanked the wires from
the breaker box (replacing the one out of the GFCI with a longer
length) and ran them into a metal box fastened to one of the ceiling
joists. Once I made up my mind to do it, the worst part turned out to
be removing the protected line from the breaker box -- electrician
didn't use those metal feed-throughs with the screw-fastened cable
holders, but plastic widgets that have a one-way plastic tongue that's
pushed in to hold the cable. I'll wager that these will make life
difficult if we ever have to replace the breaker box.
Dick
|
290.293 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jul 07 1992 14:28 | 4 |
| Naw, the plastic widgets will pull out easily enough if you compress the
"tongue" with pliers. I've used a few of these and like them.
Steve
|
290.294 | I'll take another look | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Mon Jul 13 1992 20:47 | 8 |
| Guess I'll have to take another look at them, then -- the little I
could see had me thinking that they weren't particularly compressible,
and there wasn't an obvious way to deal with the saw-tooth ridges that
prevented them from coming out easily.
I'm sure that they save time on installation, though.
Dick
|
290.295 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jul 14 1992 11:04 | 8 |
| Just take ChannelLock-type pliers to the outside ring, compressing
the wire "flatter" - it should pull right out.
I don't use these regularly, because I like the ability to feed
two wires in with the standard metal kind (which I know is frowned
upon, but what the heck...)
Steve
|
290.652 | Upgrading electric | NYTP22::NAEGELY | TPU 88 IM 91 | Wed Sep 02 1992 15:33 | 7 |
| I had my electricity upgraded from 60 amps to 100 in March. The put in a
new service panel with breakers. I would now like to upgrade my service
to 150 - 200 amps, can this be accomplished by just changing the main
breaker or is more involved then that. Thanks in advance...
jpn
|
290.653 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Sep 02 1992 18:22 | 4 |
| Most likely, you will also need to change the main feed wires to your
main panel. I.E. its just like starting over.
Marc H.
|
290.654 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Is the electric chair UL approved? | Wed Sep 02 1992 18:59 | 6 |
| There is also a maximum rated current for the breaker panel as well. The
rating is probably on a label inside somewhere. Did you get one of the
large panels with many possible breaker positions (44 or so)? These are
usually of a higher rating than the smaller panels.
-Mike
|
290.655 | If in Mass, check the existing codes .. | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early | Thu Sep 03 1992 12:18 | 20 |
| re: >Note 3067.32 Upgrading from 60 to 100 amps 32 of 32
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I can't say for certain, but when I considered upgrading to 200 amp service
from my current 100 amps; the electrical company 'suggested' that I may
already have 200 amp capacity feed wires to the main circuit panels.
I beleive the Massachusetts code has required for a few years
now that when service is upgraded (for homes) that the service conductors
(from the utility pole junction to the main feed panel) be of 200 amp capacity.
It would depend on when it was done. My home had been upgraded to 200 amp
service around 1965 - 1970 time frame, which was before this allegded
requirement.
I will know more fairly soon, because a relative's home is going to be upgraded
from 60 amp 110 V service (that was last upgraded/installed prior to 1945).
/Bob
|
290.483 | Alternstives to Gould Circuit Breakers? | AKOCOA::CWALTERS | | Fri Oct 02 1992 13:08 | 21 |
|
I'm about to connect two new outlets to the existing panel mftd by
Gould. Reading the preceding question & answers there appears to be a
possible code requirement that the breakers and panel are from the same
manufacturer. Does anyone know if this is a code requirement for NH?
Also, what alternative make of breakers will fit in Gould panels? They
don't seem to be stocked by the local volume suppliers. First time
I've done any rewiring in the US, so any other tips and hints are
more than welcome.
Second question. The outlets have both a hole to receive a stripped
wire, and a screw connector. I assume that the hole is for the
incoming supply from the panel and the screw connector is to
daisychain another outlet. I've looked at several books, but they
don't state this explicitly.
Thanks,
Colin
|
290.484 | Ask a good supplier about alternative manufacturer's of breakers | SPEZKO::LEMIEUX | | Fri Oct 02 1992 15:17 | 23 |
|
> I'm about to connect two new outlets to the existing panel mftd by
> Gould. Reading the preceding question & answers there appears to be a
> possible code requirement that the breakers and panel are from the same
> manufacturer. Does anyone know if this is a code requirement for NH?
Yes this is a requirement in NH.
Try asking for ITE breakers at the suppliers. ITE bought Gould
a few years ago. Another way around is to go to a good electrical
supplier and ask them which manufacturer's breakers are approved for
replacement use in Gould panels. They should know, if they don't have
them find out for you. Their vendors will know. If you don't have
any luck place another reply here and I'll find out for you.
The second question...You can use either the screws or the holes to feed
or daisy chain. Scews tend to make a better connection but if used
properly the holes will work well also.
Good luck
Paul
|
290.485 | will do | AKOCOA::CWALTERS | | Fri Oct 02 1992 17:31 | 7 |
|
Great! thanks very much for the info.
Best,
Colin
|
290.486 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Oct 02 1992 22:09 | 5 |
| Hmm - I asked the Nashua electrical inspector about this and he
said there was no such requirement. Indeed, he inspected my
Crouse-Hinds panel with breakers by three different manufacturers.
Steve
|
290.487 | A little more detail... | SPEZKO::LEMIEUX | | Sun Oct 04 1992 21:48 | 46 |
|
Hi Steve,
Doesn't surprise me that Nashua inspector didn't know about
the requirement....it's one of those funny little gotchas in the
NEC. The rquirment states that products will be installed according
to the manufacturer's labeling and UL listings. Most if not all
panelboards have a label in them or in the box that states what
brand breakers are acceptable for use in the panelboard. If the
panelboard is installed with breakers not acceptable for the
panelboards listings and lableings, the installation is in violation
because of the non adherence to the instructions and labeling of the
manufacturer. The NEC does not come right out and say X breaker
shall not be installed in X panelboard.
I happen to be aware of this issue mostly because
I was involved with DEC's power conditioning and UPS systems
product line for 4 years and we could not allow breakers in our
panelboards that were not approved for the panelboards we supplied
in that equipment. At the time electricians, customers and field
service folks were trying to use breakers such as ITE, Gould and
General Switch in our Bryant panelboards. Some of the cities bagged
the installers for code violations when they did this. It was also
covered by the instructer I had for the most recent code update
training that I am required to attend in order to keep my electricians
licence in NH.
If you want to know the gory details I can look up the article on
Monday. My latest code book is in the office along with the UL
"white Book" on the equipment in question.
You should try performing electrical work in all the different towns
with all the different interpretations :') I've worked all over the
lower 48 and Alaska as an electrician both for DEC and Contractors
and you would be surprised how many different interpretations of
a code article you can find. Makes life interesting to say the
least.
Later,
Paul
P.S. Steve the printer works great. Thanks!
|
290.488 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Is the electric chair UL approved? | Sun Oct 04 1992 22:37 | 8 |
| Is it the _manufacturer_ or the _type_ of breaker? Each breaker has a letter
code, and the box also has a code for the type(s) of breakers allowed.
A breaker that doesn't match these codes shouldn't be allowed.
I'm sure that in many cases a breaker and box with a particular code is
available from only one manufacturer.
-Mike
|
290.489 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Oct 05 1992 00:42 | 10 |
| Re: .17
Can you cite the section of the NEC which even hints as to this?
I can't find it in my 1990 edition. I did find, however, a statement
on the label of my breaker box that the breakers must be of the
"same manufacturer". But "interchangeable" breakers are very
common - perhaps this "requirement" is often overlooked in
residential applications?
Steve
|
290.490 | Here is some reference material and code article | SPEZKO::LEMIEUX | | Mon Oct 05 1992 11:19 | 39 |
| Hi,
Now that I'm in the office I can be a little more specific.
The article in NPFA70 "National Electrical Code" is:
110-3(b) Installation and Use. Listed or Labeled equipment shall be
used or installed in accordance with any instructions included in the
listing or labeling.
(the NEC handbook has some wording that helps explain this
this article)
The follow-up on this is the UL "White Book" with the title:
"General information for Electrical Construction, Hazardous Location,
and Electric Heating and Air Conditioning Equipment"
1990
This document contains the UL listings for generic equipment in
various catagories. It spells out what is required by the manufacturer
to comply with the UL listing they have been tested for...labeling,
instructions to the installer etc. Great bedtime reading Better than
counting sheep!
Another gotcha that some of you may have heard of that relates
to the same article has to do with placing convenience receptacles
over electric baseboard heat. The code never says "dont do it" but the
instructions contained in the box with the electric baseboard say not
to place electric baseboard directly under these receptacles. Because
the instructions say dont do it the code also.
Gotta run
Later
Paul
|
290.788 | Meter check please | RESYNC::D_SMITH | | Wed Oct 14 1992 15:48 | 11 |
| Is there any way to verify meter accuracy yourself without getting
the service department of the electric company involved?
Such as using a given load (light bulb or simular) on the meter
and check within the hour, it's useage?
I question the accuracy of our meter and I'm just wondering if it's
even worth getting involved.
Dave'
|
290.789 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Oct 15 1992 10:59 | 9 |
| RE: .69
Sure.....why not do it yourself? I would use a large load, though,
since the meters values are in fairly large units.
You could turn off all the circuit breakers except for one with a known
load on it.
Marc H.
|
290.656 | Underground wiring pros/cons | INDEV1::GSMITH | I need two of everything | Thu Oct 15 1992 19:27 | 17 |
|
After reading all the NOTES regarding 60-100-200 amp service, I am
still unsure of an important issue.
After adding a couple of breakers to my 100amp service, the electrician
informed me that I am 'maxed' out. Meaning, I can not add any
additional breakers. I am now considering upgrading to 200 amp service.
Anyway, the issue is I have underground wire from the house to the
street. Some noters mentioned that the wire from house to street (pole)
is NOT affected, but a couple others said it WAS. Since I do no want to
dig up my yard.... can I upgrade to 200amp service withOUT touching the
wire from the house to the road?
(I didn't think to ask the electrician at the time).
Smitty
|
290.657 | | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu Oct 15 1992 21:21 | 9 |
| Sorry, it depends on the guage of the wire leading to your panel.
Maybe if you can accurately measure the diameter of the conductors,
someone here can give an answer. For a definative answer, I'm afraid
you need to ask an electrician or your elecrtical inspector. Or, you
could try calling your local electric company to see if they have
any knowledge of your feeder.
Luck,
Larry
|
290.491 | Seamans Elec. Supply for ITE (Gould) Products | JUPITR::FERRARO | I'm the NRA | Fri Oct 16 1992 04:11 | 4 |
| Seamans electical supply in Manchester carries ITE (Gould)
products...
I've used them before... try the yellow pages for telephone #
|
290.658 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Fri Oct 16 1992 10:30 | 11 |
| RE: .34
The town engineer should have a copy of the builder's plans for your
home. The wire size should be shown on the print. Try using the
town/city services. Once you have the wire size/guage then you
will know if you can go to 200 Amps.
Also, the wire to the house from the pole is often owned by the power
company. Check with them....they will let you know.
Marc H.
|
290.659 | call your power company | EVETPU::MCCARTHY | but I kept rolling off the couch | Fri Oct 16 1992 11:32 | 32 |
|
>> The town engineer should have a copy of the builder's plans for your
>> home. The wire size should be shown on the print. Try using the
My guess would be that the plans would have, at best, the amps of the main
panel that was "planned" for the house. In my cause it may say 100A because
that was standard for the development. In anycase, depending on when the place
was wired it would be up to the utility company to determine what to run. I
have been told that both Mass Electric and Boston Edison use there own set of
rules when it comes to figuring out if the wire is the correct guage.
>>> Also, the wire to the house from the pole is often owned by the power
>>> company. Check with them....they will let you know.
Boston Edison and Mass Electric "own" everything up to:
a) The meter if you have underground service
b) The splices (non-tech term) at the top of the service running up the side
of the house.
Both of these utiliy companies get VERY UPSET if you touch the wire on the
other end of the splices. I used to work in these areas and heard war stories
of electrians having to buy the replacment cable from the pole to the house
when they cut on the wrong side!
PSNH pulled the cables through the underground 250' PVC at my house in
Merrimack NH. I am not sure who payed for it though (the builder or PSNH).
I asked for a 200A service because of the number of 220V appliances/tools I
have - an "upgrade" to the cost of the house of $250 as I recall.
bjm
|
290.660 | 200A box with 100A breaker/feed? | MAY21::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MLO5-5/E71,223-4663,ESB | Fri Oct 16 1992 13:01 | 11 |
| How much load are you adding? If your total system load isn't that great,
maybe you could get away with a 100A main to protect the feed, and a 200A
panel to fit the breakers. Either put the 100A breaker in a separate
box, or mount it in the 200A panel and run the feeder to it.
What's the calculation for how many breakers/amps you could put in the
box with this arrangement?
The idea here is to get rid of the breaker limitation, and then upgrade
the feed when the 100A breaker starts popping due to overcurrent from
increased demand (if that ever happens).
|
290.790 | Experience reducing baseline elec. consumption. | TALLIS::KOCH | DTN226-6274 ... If you don't look good, DEC doesn't look good. | Fri Oct 16 1992 14:09 | 52 |
| On the subject of how much electricity your house is using when
nothing is going on:
I studied how much each gadget that was plugged in was using by
successively unplugging them and recording the change in meter
revolutions. I was able to cut the baseline power consumption in half by
doing these things:
The cable TV decoder is always hot to the touch. Its rated at 27
watts, which it consumes whether it is "on" or not. I bought a timer for
$10 and plugged the cable decoder into it. Now the decoder is only on
from 6 to 11 pm by default. The savings is 11Kwh/month, or $1.10 at Boston
Edison rates.
I disconnected the TV from the wall outlet and plugged it into the
switched outlet on the cable decoder. Now it only consumes standby power
(~5W) when the decoder is "on", not 24 hours a day.
If your VCR will remember the time during a 20 hour power failure,
you can connect it to the timer output, too, saving standby power most of
the time.
I have a 5" TV with a battery pack that hums whenever its plugged
in. I guess it tries to charge the battery whether there's a battery in
it or not. Now I only plug that TV in when watching it.
There are a couple of industrial timers in my basement that have been
there since I moved in. I disconnected them.
The next time my stove gets pulled out, I'm going to disconnect its
clock. There is already a clock and timer on the microwave, plus two other
timers in the kitchen. How many clocks and timers do you need in the
kitchen??
While chasing after clocks and standby power may sound like chicken
feed, each 5W device you disconnect saves 3.6Kwh/month. Between the TV,
VCR and stove, thats another 10Kwh/mo saved.
When the nightlight bulb burned out, I replaced it with a 4W bulb.
(Standard nightlight is 7W.) Saving: ~1Kwh/month.
When the porch lights burned out, I replaced them with 25W bulbs.
Note: some wall-switch timers may not work when the load is so small.
So its reasonable to expect to be able to save at least 20 Kwh/month.
In my case the total consumption went down by just over 10%.
In addition to that, converting the timed lights in the living room
from 4 X 100W to 5 X 27-watt-compact-flourescent saves ~30Kwh/mo. If you
get the compact flourescents for $3 during a promotion, they pay for
themselves in a few months.
|
290.791 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Oct 16 1992 14:18 | 14 |
| You saved 10%, but what did that really come out to? Maybe $5 per month?
I would guess that is probably on the high side. And, you had to purchase
some equipment to accomodate that.
There is a point where it is not worth the effort or inconvenience. Switching
from a 100w bulb to a 40w bulb is not worth it to me (I know you did not do
this, it is just an example).
I did get the information on the new bulbs, and I will probably order 1
for a test. But, they seem to be low wattage bulbs - 60w equivalent I believe.
And the electric company says the actual output is really less than 60w
equivalent.
Ed..
|
290.792 | 6 month payback but otherwise agree. | TALLIS::KOCH | DTN226-6274 ... If you don't look good, DEC doesn't look good. | Fri Oct 16 1992 14:50 | 25 |
| >You saved 10%, but what did that really come out to? Maybe $5 per month?
>I would guess that is probably on the high side. And, you had to purchase
>some equipment to accomodate that.
Thats why I gave the price of the timer -- the payback is less than
a year. I also estimated the payback time for the compact flourescents --
well under a year.
So for an investment of about $25, I save about $4/month.
>There is a point where it is not worth the effort or inconvenience. ...
Right. These were all things that I was willing to do, and in
general only have to do _once_. The plugging the portable TV in when I
want to use it is the only example of a change in routine.
>I did get the information on the new bulbs, and I will probably order 1
>for a test. But, they seem to be low wattage bulbs - 60w equivalent I believe.
>And the electric company says the actual output is really less than 60w
>equivalent.
You are right about the light output being a little less than the
rating. Thats why I compared 4 100W incandescents to 5 27W compact
flourescents. The 27W CF is supposed to be equivalent to a 100W
incandescent, but isn't.
|
290.661 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Fri Oct 16 1992 16:16 | 8 |
| RE: .38
You can't do that. The limitation on the number of breakers is fixed,
relative to the load rating of the service. They have done the
calculations for you, so that you don't add breakers/circuits
till the main pops.
Marc H.
|
290.793 | save roughly 18% | JURAN::HAWKE | | Fri Oct 16 1992 16:36 | 11 |
| interesting tidbit about the cable box mine was always hot too.
Now I just have basic cable and run it right into the tv and use
the cable box for a football. Along the same vein I just installed
a timer for my hot water heater (electric 40 gallon) has anyone had
any experience (pros and cons) with these. For mine and my wifes
schedules I have it set to be on 11hrs a day and off 13 hrs. I hope
to save $10-$15 a month is this realistic ? BTW the timer is off
most off the night and on in the morning off in the afternoon and
on in the evening.
Dean
|
290.794 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Fri Oct 16 1992 18:16 | 51 |
| Not necessarily ....
You are only going to reduce the standby losses a little bit ...
Think about it, the water heater is thermostatically controlled.
left on scenario ...
Say at Midnight, the water is 160F
at 1:00 the water drops to 150F, it turns on and gives 10F worth
at 2:00 again 150F another 10F worth
at 3 ... etc etc
at 8:00 again 80F anoerh 10F worth
Now ... you've provided 80F worth of heat in 8 hours.
Timer scenario
At midnight water heater off until 8am initial temp 160F
At 1am water = 150F
At 2am water = 140.5F (Cooler water loses less heat)
At 3am water = 131F
At 4am warer = 122.5F
5am water = 114F
6am water = 105.5F
7am water = 97
8am water = 89
Now at 8am, the heater turns on and brings the water back up to 160
so now provides 71F worth of heat.
Total savings about 9F worth of heat ... these are known as the
standby losses and are, in this example, cutting the standby costs
by about 10% only. Normal tank losses are even less than this.
Now if you have a 40 gallon tank and take a shower that say consumes
10 gallons, you have reduced the tank temperature by 1/4 of the
temp difference (160-60) i.e about 25F worth of heat. So, take 2
showers, 1 dishwaher load and another miscellaneous 10 gallons worth
a day and you're talking 100F worth of heat to the tank. So, the
losses end up well under 10% of the usage costs of the hot water.
These numbers are only for illustration purposes. The actual numbers
will vary ... but under 5% standby losses for a whole day is not unusual.
A poorly insulated tank will save substantially more, as will water
saving shower heads.
No way will this save you 18% ... think about it ... you are still
using the same amount of hot water!
Stuart
|
290.795 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Is the electric chair UL approved? | Fri Oct 16 1992 19:24 | 24 |
| re last 2:
You can save a little more money than .75 states if you can get into the habit
of running a dishwasher or taking a shower just after the timer turns off,
if there's enough hot water in the heater to do so. This way you use up
the hot water in the tank rather than either letting it cool off at night
or keeping it warm (if you didn't have the timer).
Otherwise the following happens:
You take a shower, tank kicks on. Tank works to heat up all the replacement
water to normal temperature.
Timer shuts off. Water cools off overnight. Heater heats the water all
over again in the AM
Or: (if no timer) Heater kicks on and off all night keeping the water
hot.
You can get a very rough idea how much $ you save by checking the water temp.
just before the timer kicks back on. If it is still warm you won't save much.
If it has cooled off to room temp. you'll save quite a bit more.
-Mike
|
290.796 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Fri Oct 16 1992 19:52 | 7 |
| You will certainly save a bit more of the standby losses ... but even
so the amount is still going to be small by comparison with the
hot water usage, and the water loss in the pipes themselves. I have
well insulated pipes and I still lose plenty of heat out of the pipes.
Probably as much as the tank standby losses.
Stuart
|
290.797 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Is the electric chair UL approved? | Fri Oct 16 1992 20:44 | 5 |
| .76 will save about whatever it costs to heat one shower's worth of water a
day in addition to standby losses. Pipes cool off rather quickly even with
insulation, so I don't think a timer helps with losses there.
-Mike
|
290.798 | More on saving hot water heating costs. | TALLIS::KOCH | DTN226-6274 ... If you don't look good, DEC doesn't look good. | Mon Oct 19 1992 12:52 | 19 |
| Well if we're going to expand this note to talk about general ways
of saving money, I installed a hot water preheater as suggested in Old
House Journal:
I picked up an old water heater that somebody was throwing out and
took the skins off and removed the insulation. I connected it so that the
cold water in goes into the preheater tank and then goes into the hot water
heater. In general the basement is at least 10 degrees warmer than the
cold water coming in, so by having the water sit in this tank, it preheats
by 10 degrees. In the winter the cold water coming in from the street is
40F and the basement is about 50F. So the hot water heater only has to
heat the water by about 80F instead of 90F. In the summer, the cold water
is about 55F and the basement is about 65F. So the amount of energy you
have to spend on hot water should be reduced by about 10% in the winter and
15% in the summer. Maybe a little less if you use so much water that it
doesn't preheat fully. It cost about $40 for the pipe, valves and
fittings.
NB: It took two scavenged HW heaters to find one that didn't leak!
|
290.799 | Our last hot water bill was $34 | SSPENG::FYFE | | Mon Oct 19 1992 13:22 | 12 |
|
RE: .-1 Good Idea! I may have to try this!
A working example:
I has a timer on my electric hot water (before recently moving to
propane). Running the timer from 5:30 to 9:00 and then from 16:00 to
19:00 gave us ample hot water and took $15 off the hot water portion
of our electric bill. This included leaving the hot water on all day
on saturdays.
Doug.
|
290.296 | Technical problems aside -- what about political? | MAY21::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MLO5-5/E71,223-4663,ESB | Mon Oct 19 1992 15:44 | 89 |
| Re. .155, .161
Well, I'm finally getting around to the upgrade.
FYI, Square-D now makes two lines of service equipment. One, dubbed
"Homelite", is compatible with other brands and generally frowned upon
by all who have come into contact with it (may be a question of sales
commission ratios, though :-). The "original" Square-D is still sold
at Home Depot in Nashua. Look at the part numbers to tell for sure.
The old stuff is "QO", the new stuff is "HOM". I got a QO panel and
breakers, and I have found them quite pleasant to work with.
I've rewired most everything into the 200A panel, still protecting the
main with the old 100A breaker while I wait to upgrade the service and
meter.
I'm now running into logistical/political problems, rather than
technical. This is in MA, I've got a permit and MA Elec. workorder
to upgrade to 200A. I've got a new meter box and heavier aluminum
cable, waiting to arrange disconnect/inspect/reconnect dates to do the
service entrance work.
Called MA Electric this am, and got quoted a bunch of other
requirements that I hadn't been apprised of (although I had contacted
them twice before, and even talked to the engineer on the phone the
week before). They want me to trim the branches around the cable from
the pole to the house to provide a 3' radius clear. They want me to
raise the house end of the cable because it is "too low". On the
phone, I was told 10', I know the house end is approximately 14', so I
would guess that the problem is the low point of the cable. I was also
told something about needing a 3' radius from the nearest window to the
service, hopefully that means 3' to the drip loops, not 3' to any part
of the service cable!
I understand that these are all good rules for my safety, but I'm
pretty annoyed that MA Electric waited until I was well into the
project to say, "oh, by the way...".
Next political snafu -- I was told by MA Electric to have the inspector
contact them directly to set up a "time for a meeting about this." I
called him and told them this, and he said he wants no part of it. He
said something to the effect of "I don't want to act as a consultant on
this, hire an electricion. The State requires me to let you do your
own work, but I'm not going to oversee it." Again, I see where he's
coming from, but I don't understand why he waits until I'm well into
the project. Other tidbits from this phone conversation. He says:
- I'm liable even after pulling the permit and passing inspection,
if the house wiring EVER gives me any problems.
- He generally gives permits sight unseen to licensed electricians
who have registered insuarance with the town, if he "knows the
quality of their work."
- I mentioned that my wife stumbled accross an electrician rewiring
the light over the kitchen sink before we moved in. Seems the
light's wiring had "burned up" (electrician's words), and he was
making the fixes for the Realtor. He also told my wife "the rest
of the house wiring is fine".
I asked the Inspector, "should I go after the electrician for
making this statement, given the problems I've been seeing in the
wiring and given what you've said about liability. Where do I find
the permit he pulled?" Well, there probably isn't a permit, since
probably he's a "local guy" who may not have even pulled one even
though he's a licensed electrician.
- "Maybe you could hire a licensed electrician to do the service work
for you".
What a stinking racket. I'm stuck now; I'm committed to the upgrade,
I've got no choice but to complete, and now all of a sudden I've got to
go pay an electrician to finish off the work. I bet this won't be
cheap...
Anyone know an electrician, preferably FAR AWAY from Lancaster and not
involved in this scam, who is willing to do some work by the hour? I
don't want his license number on the permit, I just want him to tell me
what I need to do, and then crawl all over the Inspector if he gives me
more "requirements" when I'm done with the job. I figure maybe 3 hours
work in two different visits. I'm willing to pay $150.00 without
quibbling at this point.
By the way, how much does it cost to get an electrician's license?
These guys make twice the hourly pay that I do, and I could pass an
exam with a couple more days of studying!
Sick of living in the People's Republic,
Peter
|
290.800 | I like the preheat idea too | JURAN::HAWKE | | Mon Oct 19 1992 16:27 | 18 |
290.297 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Mon Oct 19 1992 16:41 | 10 |
| This is why I firmly believe that the rulse need to have no grey area for
the inspector to interpret. It is either right or wrong. He should not
have to privilege (or power) to help his "friends" and hurt his "non-friends".
He should lbe required to treat you equally with anyone else - licensed
or otherwise. He should also be just as strict on the license requirements.
You can bet the electrician who did not get a permit probably charged for
getting a permit, though.
Ed..
|
290.298 | They have rules - don't know where they are written.... | EVETPU::MCCARTHY | but I kept rolling off the couch | Mon Oct 19 1992 17:13 | 13 |
| With my dealing with Mass Electric and Boston Edison, it has ALWAYS been the
town/city inspector that has called them for the final hookup. There are
regulations about where the cable on the side needs to be in relationship to
- metal downspouts (X distance away)
- overhangs
- the point of attachment of their line to the house (within X distance and
above as I recall)
- Minimum height from ground
sounds like Mass Electric does not want to deal with a non-licensed person.
Brian J.
|
290.801 | TANSTAAFL and all that... | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Mon Oct 19 1992 17:36 | 11 |
|
Wouldn't the preheating idea only work if the basement was very
well insulated from the first floor? This preheating heat has to come
from somewhere, and that "somewhere" results in a cooler basement.
Without good inter-floor insulation, the cooler basement would result
in a cooler first floor which results in the furnace being run more.
I think this pre-heating tank is a case of having to look at the
overall energy savings and not just the energy saved by the hot water
tank.
-craig
|
290.802 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Mon Oct 19 1992 17:39 | 5 |
| RE: .82
True....conservation of energy is still true.
Marc H.
|
290.803 | Not "warm", just less cold | CADSYS::FLEECE::RITCHIE | Elaine Kokernak Ritchie | Mon Oct 19 1992 17:43 | 14 |
| re: .82
I don't understand your question, but I think there is some confusion with the
term "pre-heating". I think the idea is to have a "pre" tank which gives the
water from a well or the street to comes up to "room temperature" of the basement
before the water heater tries to heat it to the target temperature. I've
wondered about this since moving into a home with a well for the first time.
The well water is _cold_!
Of course, you've got to have room in the basement for another tank. And you
will have no one to kick but yourself if a tank leaks, because you've doubled
your number of tanks that can leak!
Elaine
|
290.804 | encouraged use of plentiful non-demand electricity | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | It's apple picking season! | Mon Oct 19 1992 17:44 | 25 |
|
> So maybe this won't be buying me all that much :-(..
But be happy with all the energy you're saving if it's still hot. :-)
I suppose it's an easy enough of a test to just turn off the electric
switch on/to the hot water heater and simply seeing how warm it is when
running water in the morning (before installing a timer).
I thought the REAL reason for switching to a timed cycle however is not
standby-losts, but because the electric company charges a lower rate
for electricity during non-demand hours like at night. Everyone takes
a shower before work, and everyone's heater immediately turns on to
heat the new water at peak time coinciding with the work day starting.
Waiting to heat it up until later saves you several pennies every watt
in what they charge you. That really adds up (actually it was a
straight 25% saved).
My house came with a timed-cycle heater installed, and I was very sad
to hear that the electric companies don't allow a two-step pricing
system anymore. I guess they aren't so strapped for electricity during
peak demand hours anymore to encourage people to use it when it's
plentiful (during non-peak hours). My grandparents used to save a lot
of hot water costs this way too. Sad it's not available anymore.
|
290.805 | saving energy story | TOOLS::COLLIS::JACKSON | Pro-Jesus | Mon Oct 19 1992 18:45 | 8 |
| My Dad grew up during the Depression and I'm reminded of
what happened when he visited his mother about 15 years ago.
My grandmother was very much of a tightwad (so much that
she died well off!) and, in the interest of saving energy,
*insisted* my Dad change the 40W bulb in the refrigerator
(the one that only goes on when you open the door!) to
a 25W bulb. :-)
|
290.806 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Mon Oct 19 1992 18:59 | 28 |
|
Re: .84
It isn't the degree (pun intended) of how "warm" the water exits
the pre-heating tank, but rather the notion that the water is getting
warmer, ie. obtaining heat energy -- and the only way to do that is to
remove heat energy from somewhere else. Even if your well water only
went from 40 degrees to 45 degrees in the pre-heating tank, that is
_still_ 5 degrees worth of heat energy (multiplied by the mass of the
water, etc.) that was extracted from the air in the basement. In this
case, even though nobody would probably claim 45 degree water to be
"warm", the basement was made cooler in the process.
Now as long as there is good insulation between the floors and the
basement is not heated living space, then this could have an overall net
savings of energy for the house. If either of these criteria is not
met, then it becomes questionable whether any energy is being saved in
the overall picture.
One way of getting around this problem, would be to bury a big
plastic tank around 8-10 feet underground and have the hot-water tank's
input pipe first sent back outside to this tank and then back inside to
the hot water tank. This way, the energy extracted to pre-warm the water
would be from the outside ground and not from the air in the basement.
Getting practical, however, I wonder if the amount of energy obtained
would be worth the hassles of this.
-craig
|
290.807 | gound is a great heat sink | KOLFAX::WHITMAN | Acid Rain Burns my Bass | Mon Oct 19 1992 20:07 | 32 |
| < Now as long as there is good insulation between the floors and the
< basement is not heated living space, then this could have an overall net
< savings of energy for the house. If either of these criteria is not
< met, then it becomes questionable whether any energy is being saved in
< the overall picture.
<
< One way of getting around this problem, would be to bury a big
< plastic tank around 8-10 feet underground and have the hot-water tank's
< input pipe first sent back outside to this tank and then back inside to
< the hot water tank. This way, the energy extracted to pre-warm the water
< would be from the outside ground and not from the air in the basement.
< Getting practical, however, I wonder if the amount of energy obtained
< would be worth the hassles of this.
<
I would like to believe the reason my basement is so cool in the summer is
because the heat transfer between the air in my basement and the
constant(almost) 55 deg ground is much greater than the heat transfer from my
basement and my living space. Conversely the heat in my basement in the
winter is a combination of losses in my heating system, hotwater pipes etc,
some convection with the living space above (however heat rises) and again the
relatively good heat transfer between the constant (almost) 55 deg ground
surrounding my basement and the air in that basement.
To make a long story short, in most standard construction New England homes,
the temperature of the basement is due mainly to the surrounding ground
temperature, not by the living space above. The exception to this rule would
be where there is heavy insulation in the basement walls and basement floor,
or a house with a Forced hot air system where the heat ducts and cold air
returns are not well insulated.
Al
|
290.299 | Big waves make for big troubles | WMOIS::BOUDREAU_C | DAYSLIKETHISTHATPUSHMEOVRTHEBRINK | Mon Oct 19 1992 21:05 | 43 |
| Re Ed,
How can you say that the electrician probably charged for a permit he
did not get?? I really think it is unfair to make a general statement
like that. In fact, if it is a repair, a permit is not always
necessary.
RE .172
As for the Homeowner doing is own service...Welcome to daytime TV
:*) There is no doubt that the person that is behind your problems at
Mass E is a major PIA to all of us (electrical contractors), good, bad
or otherwise.
In order to understand what you are experiencing, you have to
understand that the utility (ME) does not like Homeowners doing their
own services PERIOD!!! They won't come out and tell you but that is the
way they feel (trust me). Second, since they know you are a homeowner,
and are probably green on this, they are going to make you do all kinds
of stuff. These are things that most electricians would do anyways, but
since you may not know what is going on they'll demand it instead of
expect it. They also know that there will be no liability insurance on
your job. This means that ME will be liable (enter deep pockets here).
The wire Inspector (WI) wants no part of it. Typically an electrician
pulls a permit, gets a "D#" and does the service, then calls the WI for
inspection, he calls ME and ME comes back for a "retap". That's it. I
hardly ever see the inspectors. Not because we have a "racket", but if
he has a problem, he will call, and I'd go fix. The first thing you
want to find out is if he has any "peeves" and entertain them (it will
cost less than you think).
ME doesn't want to do a disconnect/reconnect. They don't do it for
us, since it's easier to do it hot. Technically you will have to get
the inspector there to call the utility BACK to turn your power on.
Remember YOU wanted it off because YOU were changing the service, Your
service will be considered new and requires an INSPECTION before they are
required to reconnect. If you start making waves now, you ain't seen
nothing yet. Make sure you have all of your required stock, and you
finish in time to get WI there before he goes home, or get a generator :*)
I don't want to dampen your spirits, but this is the real world. Us
electricians get it too, but if you know the SYSTEM, you can stick by your
guns and tell them it isn't their problem. If not, well...
|
290.808 | Back to the topic... | ESKIMO::CASSIDY | Aspiring conservationist | Tue Oct 20 1992 03:42 | 11 |
| > I thought the REAL reason for switching to a timed cycle however is not
> standby-losts, but because the electric company charges a lower rate
> for electricity during non-demand hours like at night.
I don't see how this can be. The Electric Co. charges you by
kWH. They read the total on your meter and subtract from the old
reading. The difference is how many kilowatts used since the last
time the meter was read.
The meter doesn't have a clock and would measure kW's at the
same rate no matter the hour of the day.
|
290.300 | and the sparkes fly!! | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Tue Oct 20 1992 10:01 | 12 |
|
Correct me if I was steared wrong here but, in getting your
work permit for the upgrade ( "D" number), dont the require
a valid Electricians Licens number????
And I can tell you about difficult when the a local contractor
is also the towns #2 inspector and when you hire someone from
out of town who under cuts his price by big bucks..... and lets
not forget #1 who is an A-- ---e to start with!!! gurrrrrrr.....
JD
|
290.809 | Preheater is mostly but not completely a free ride. | TALLIS::KOCH | DTN226-6274 ... If you don't look good, DEC doesn't look good. | Tue Oct 20 1992 12:24 | 17 |
| Picking up the conservation of energy/preheater tank thread --
I agree that to the extent that _extra_ heat flows from the upstairs
to the basement _during_the_heating_season_, the preheater isn't getting
anything 'for free.'
But during the months when the heat isn't used, the preheater is
absorbing 'free' warmth, mostly due to the good thermal connection between
the basement and the relatively constant temperature ground. You can help
the process by opening the basement door in the summer & warming the
basement up. [NOTE: the preheater will appear to leak in the summer but
its just sweat.]
I've been toying with the idea of putting a second preheater in the
attic, where my min/max thermometer pegged at 130F last summer. Now that
would be free heat!! But the hassles of installation, maintenance and
precautions to protect against leaks have discouraged me.
|
290.810 | not clear how it used to work, but day/night kWH were on bills | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | It's apple picking season! | Tue Oct 20 1992 12:28 | 10 |
|
There are usually two meters installed in this set-up. I have no
idea how they set it up, but they get daytime & nighttime usage
from them (I assume one meter is daytime & the other nighttime).
Anyway, it's a moot point because Mass Electric doesn't do this
anymore. I'll have to ask the person how my set-up works when I
have the free ME energy audit this month...
-Erik
|
290.811 | cheap oil water htr | KAYAK::GROSSO | Prevent & Prepare or Repent & Repair | Tue Oct 20 1992 15:46 | 3 |
|
On the preheat issue: If the house is heated with oil and the water with
electricity, its still a win even if the extra tank were in the bedroom. :-)
|
290.812 | sounding better and better | JURAN::HAWKE | | Tue Oct 20 1992 16:06 | 7 |
| on the preheater for me it may be a very good idea my HW tank
is located near the woodstove that heats the whole house now
if I just addeda preheater the wood stove would certainly bring
up the temp a few degrees...FWIW its usually low to mid
60s in my basement in the summer and low to mid 80s in the winter.
Dean
|
290.813 | Water heater control credits still exist | LJOHUB::WESSELS | Register and VOTE | Tue Oct 20 1992 17:27 | 14 |
| (A lurker notes...)
Maybe Mass Electric doesn't start up new "water heater control" arrangements,
but I certainly have a second electric meter on my house, with the on/off
clocks inside, and I get a small credit (about $5) on my electric bill each
month.
Funny thing is, the previous owner had wired the water heater back into the
main panel, thus showing ZERO usage on the controlled meter each month, and
the credit was still showing up on the bill. Being an honest guy (:-)), and
needing more space on our panel, I had it hooked back up the way it was
supposed to be.
Brian W.
|
290.301 | I've calmed down, but I'm still stubborn :-) | MAY21::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MLO5-5/E71,223-4663,ESB | Tue Oct 20 1992 19:17 | 27 |
| I've received further good advice offline, and will type it in when I
get a chance. My cheeks were getting sore from pouting when I entered
my last reply; now I've calmed down a bit :-)
I called a different number at ME today, to ask for their "Red Book",
which appears to be "under revision". The Red Book tells you what
ME requires above and beyond the MA Electrical Code. My request got
back to the engineer (gee, I wonder if she's reading this notes file
too :-). She called me up and wanted to "know the status of my site";
I ignored the question and asked for a copy of the book. She is sending
it to me. Gave me a little more grief about the book "being meant for
contractors" and "out of date", and saying that it "doesn't cover the
stuff you would know if you were an electrician" -- I calmly responded
that I could look that information up in the MA Electrical Code which is
based on the National Electric code, and she left me alone after that.
I intend to be stubborn about this and do the work myself without getting
a license number added to my permit. I have contacted one or two
electricians, and if/when I get in trouble I will pay one to finish the
job, but I'll be darned if I'll put his license number down :-)
On to the technical aspects of reading code and installing a taller
masthead. By the way, what is a "Burndee" (unknown spelling)? Is it
like a smokeshifter, or is it a trade name for a device or method for
jumping the existing meter box?
Peter
|
290.814 | Clock in the glass meter, still seen in Ithaca NY | MAY21::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MLO5-5/E71,223-4663,ESB | Tue Oct 20 1992 19:21 | 5 |
| The day/night usage is accomplished by a meter with a clock in it, as alluded
to in .94. Had one of these on an apartment in Ithaca a few years ago. The
clock tended to get out of synch, so I adjusted my computing and electric
heating habits (one and the same with a uVAX II :-) according to how wrong the
meter clock was...
|
290.815 | | GRIND::CBUSKY | | Tue Oct 20 1992 20:05 | 15 |
| >The day/night usage is accomplished by a meter with a clock in it, as alluded
>to in .94. Had one of these on an apartment in Ithaca a few years ago. The
I have a single meter set-up with Time-of-Day usage. We have Peak and
Off-Peak peiods where we get charged two different rates. The meter
has a single spinning disk and mechanical counters like other meters,
but it also has an LCD panel that displays, date, time, accumualted
peak and off-peak usage.
This is in Sterling Mass, (a municipal light department). I think it
is an unusual set-up though, I think I got in on it when they where
starting this program but then they quickly abandoned it. My set-up is
grand-fathered.
Charly
|
290.302 | Yes sir, no sir, anthing you blablabla sir :*) | WMOIS::BOUDREAU_C | DAYSLIKETHISTHATPUSHMEOVRTHEBRINK | Tue Oct 20 1992 20:58 | 26 |
| JD
When getting a D#, they want to know WHO the electrician is. I have
never given them my Lic#. However, if they know you are the homeowner,
they will ask you for a Lic# (probably), and let the games begin. I
think the mentality is the STATE may allow you to do a service, but they
WILL make it difficult.
I have heard of some towns where the inspector was working in the
jurisdiction of his inspections. He would call customers about bad
(this is debatable) work being done, then OFFER to do the job as a
contractor. He is no longer the inspector. I never had a problem with
him, plus I knew him before he got the job (out of towners beware).
This is not right. If I did have a problem, I would use other channels to
get this resolved. As far as I am concerned, no inspector, or
assistant should be able to work in the town they inspect. Granted,
some inspectors are real hard @$$es, but they are running the show. To
push means they will push back. You don't want to hold up the job
because of something stupid (a technicality), so you play the game.
PSMITH,
Your engineer must have the initials MH?? I never had a problem
with her, but know some that did.
CB
|
290.303 | Burndy = splitbolt connector | SPEZKO::LEMIEUX | | Tue Oct 20 1992 21:11 | 10 |
|
Hi,
Burndee or Burndy actually, trade slang for a split bolt
connector. I won't even attempt to draw what they look like :')
The name Burndy actually belongs to a manufacturer of electrical
items such as split bolts, termination lugs etc.
Later,
Paul
|
290.304 | what they dont know.... | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Wed Oct 21 1992 10:07 | 16 |
| CB,
Well, the thing about local games is, at the time they were all
in the pot together because of the "new liability insurance" that
was being added. So they were trying to get all the local jobs
for them selfs. And the person I hired finished the main service
before the requirement deadline......
To make a long story short, It ended up being a 3month delay before
the town inspector showed up and 5min later things were signed off.
Needless to say I had finished wiring the rest of the house, tied
into the main. Covered the wall with sheetrock, was up and running
with $1500 in savings at the end of all this mess...
Needless to say, no other permits were pulled for the rest
of the house...;)
JD
|
290.305 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Wed Oct 21 1992 11:55 | 4 |
| This may be one reason why so many people do NOT pull permits. If the
inspectors made things easier, maybe more people would pull permits.
Ed..
|
290.306 | Yah, Burndy, I already have three of 'em :-) | MAY21::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MLO5-5/E71,223-4663,ESB | Wed Oct 21 1992 12:15 | 17 |
| I think the reason that I've run into a stone wall is I've become a "test
case" or last straw between the ME engineer and Inspector. Souncs like
ME doesn't like homeowners doing their own work, and the inspector has
been accomodating in the past. Now he's getting beat up about it, and the
flak is hitting me as well.
I had figured burndy was a brand name for some stupid little part.
Typical "trade password" crap -- every person I have talked to about
distribution work in an official capacity has managed to drop the term
at me to see what my response would be -- "uh, burndee, yeah, of course".
I'm going to spend Saturday reviewing the MA Code relevant to distribution,
and read ME's "out-of-date" Red Book. After that I'll write myself a
punch list and tell ME what I will do and what they need to do to fix
THEIR mis-installed lateral...
|
290.816 | My preheater hookup. | TALLIS::KOCH | DTN226-6274 ... If you don't look good, DEC doesn't look good. | Wed Oct 21 1992 13:42 | 25 |
| If you intend on installing a preheater, here is a suggested way of
hooking it up:
To HW COLD WATER
COLD from supply
^ v
| |
| | \
+-------X-------+ | Three quarter-turn
| | | | valves. More expensive
X X | but they minimize
| | / pressure drop.
| |
| | \
V V | Unions located as
V V | high above preheater
| | / as practical so if tank
| | leaks & next preheater
| | is taller, rework is
| | minimized.
| |
^ V
Preheater Preheater
HOT COLD
|
290.307 | couple of ratholes | HARDY::PARMENTER | | Thu Oct 22 1992 13:00 | 13 |
| Well, professional electricians have a bumper-sticker, "Electricity is not
a hobby." I tend to agree with them.
Incidentally, the Burndy company was founded by a man named Bern Dibney.
Each year, as Christmas presents for his customers, he wrote and published
wonderfully elegant monographs on the history of science under the general
title "The Burndy Library". I have several that my father received as a
power company distribution engineer.
Now, back to denouncing the Most High & Secret Mystic Guild of Electricians
and Inspectors and their plot to prevent Homer Homeowner from putting in
cheap, homemade short circuits.
|
290.308 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Thu Oct 22 1992 13:46 | 9 |
| I really don't think the sarcasm in reply #183 was at all called for.
Here is a person trying to perform what is legally his right to. The
powers that be are giving him a hard time. He is trying to do things right.
Why can't you, since you seem to know so much, just help the guy out,
rather than getting sarcastic? What do you have to gain by this person
not doing his own wiring - as long as it is correct?
Ed..
|
290.309 | Not exactly corruscating excoriation | HARDY::PARMENTER | | Thu Oct 22 1992 14:36 | 10 |
| Pretty light sarcasm, Ed. I'd call it "wry", and I do think I paid the rent
with an interesting sidelight on Burndy.
Denouncing building inspectors, electrical inspectors, codes, zoning, etc.,
is a regular feature of this notesfile and I see nothing wrong with some
mild humor on the subject, particularly when the noter in question is
waxing pretty sarcastic himself.
Best regards,
|
290.817 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Oct 22 1992 18:24 | 8 |
| re .79:
> In the winter the cold water coming in from the street is
>40F and the basement is about 50F. So the hot water heater only has to
>heat the water by about 80F instead of 90F.
You could save a lot more by turning down your water heater. Unless you're
one of those masochists who likes really hot showers, 120F is plenty hot enough.
|
290.310 | There are a lot of Homer Homeowners in the world | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu Oct 22 1992 22:12 | 13 |
| I have a friend in Rhode Island who decided to do his own wiring, and was
getting a hard time (over the phone) from his inspector. Then came the
first inspection. When my friend started explaining "I did so-and-so
because that's the code", the inspector immediately asked "How did you
know THAT???" When my friend replied "I read it in the NEC" everything
changed. The inspector told him about a couple of minor things he missed,
said "you're on the right track" and didn't give him any more trouble.
I guess that inspector had had too much experience with Homer Homeowner,
and didn't realize that some DIYers can (with a little help) do a good job.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
290.818 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Oct 23 1992 11:22 | 6 |
| Unless you run a dishwasher. Then you should keep it set at 140.
But, if your water heater is like mine, you have to just guess since there
is not thermostat on it. Just hotter, and colder.
Ed..
|
290.311 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Fri Oct 23 1992 11:22 | 8 |
| I wired my addition (600 sq feet) all by myself. I got a permit, and
when the electrical inspector came to the house, I showed him the
work, commenting on how I had checked the code for some questions
I had. He looked around.....signed off with no problem.
Of course, I treated him like a human.
Marc H.
|
290.819 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | | Fri Oct 23 1992 12:26 | 5 |
290.820 | 120-130 is hot enough | REJOIN::D_SMITH | | Mon Oct 26 1992 10:47 | 5 |
|
Measure the temp at the faucet using a thermometer.
Dave'
|
290.662 | | JUPITR::FERRARO | I'm the NRA | Sun Nov 01 1992 13:17 | 10 |
| If memory serves me right...
You are allowed 130% of what the main is rated for.
If the main is rated for 100amps, you can install 6@ 15amp breakers
and 2@ 20amp breakers, for a total of 130amps.
In NH, PSNH owns everything up to and including the meter, the home
owner owns the meter box and the everything downstream.
Greg
|
290.663 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Is the electric chair UL approved? | Sun Nov 01 1992 16:17 | 10 |
| re .40:
> You are allowed 130% of what the main is rated for.
> If the main is rated for 100amps, you can install 6@ 15amp breakers
> and 2@ 20amp breakers, for a total of 130amps.
If that is the case one is allowed a total of 12 15A (120V) breakers and 4 20A
(120V) breakers, properly balanced (6 15s and 2 20s each leg), as a 100A feed
supplies 100A to each leg. Double (240V) breakers count their current rating
against both legs.
|
290.664 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Nov 02 1992 00:06 | 10 |
| Re: .40
Can you cite an NEC reference for this? I can't find one, and it
seems terribly restrictive. All I can find is an absolute maximum
of 42 breakers in a single panelboard. For individual circuits,
the general rule is that the branch circuit rating be not less than
the noncontinuous load plus 125% of the continuous load, but this
doesn't, on its own, limit the number of breakers.
Steve
|
290.665 | No quote from NEC | JUPITR::FERRARO | I'm the NRA | Sun Nov 08 1992 08:09 | 10 |
| Steve,
Can't quote NEC. I got the information from the building inspector
in Londonderry, NH about 8 years ago when I built my house.
After installing a circuit for each room, and three for the kitchen
I ended up with 255amps worth of breakers on a 200amp service...
Greg
|
290.666 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Nov 11 1992 13:19 | 5 |
| I know I have a lot more than that already - probably well over 600A worth
of breakers in a 200A panel. I wonder if this is something your inspector
made up on his own...
Steve
|
290.667 | There is a rule re: total breaker amps | HURON::DUKE | | Fri Nov 13 1992 11:27 | 20 |
| I checked with a NH Master Electrician. There is something in NEC
regarding the total ampacity if breakers in a panel vs the rating of
the main breaker. There is a percentage (>100) involved which he could
not quote from memory.
The requirement is generally ignored in residential panels since the
chance of having all circuits at full capacity at any given time is so
remote ie several general purpose circuits with a lamp or two each at
most any time.
The requirement is enforced more in industrial buildings where the
majority of circuits are apt to be under heavy load.
Looks like as usual, common sense wins. (-:
Regards,
Peter Duke
|
290.668 | formula for peak expected load? | PARITY::KLEBES | John F. Klebes | Fri Nov 13 1992 12:55 | 18 |
| I thought there was a basic formula for calculating the max expected
load on the panel. Had nothing to do with the number of breakers but
on the realistic expected peak load possible. Been I while since I
calculated it but it was based on something like this:
1: a prorated amount of the max heat or air conditioning load
(prorated since it is not expected to be on all the time)
2: a general lighting circuit load based on square footage not
the number of circuits (3W/sq-ft?)
3: add to this 3kw? per general appliance circuit
(ie. kitchen,laundry, basement, etc.)
4: add to this any dedicated circuits at there rated load
(ie. water heater, range, well pump, spa, elect dryer,etc.)
After adding these all up you take 100% of the first xxx? kilowatts
and some prorated amount of the remaining kilowatts to get the maximum
expected load. This is the amount that should not exceed your panel
capacity. Seemed realistic and fair to me.
|
290.669 | .46 has the right idea for residential services | SPEZKO::LEMIEUX | | Fri Nov 13 1992 15:01 | 86 |
| re .46
Your just about right on the money.
The various formulas for determining the service entrance size are located in
the rear of the NEC book.
I've listed the ones that pertain to the discussion.
Tables and examples:
Example No. 1(a) One-family dwelling
Example No. 1(b) One-family dwelling (different load characteristics)
Example No. 2(a) Optional calculation for One-Family Dwelling heating
larger than Air conditioning
Example No. 2(b) Optional calculation for One-Family Dwelling Air
conditioning larger than Heating.
Example No. 2(c) Optional calculation for One-Family with HeatPump
single phase, 240/120-volt service
The remaining examples in this section deal with commercial and
Multi-family dwellings.
Typically when you run out of circuits in the average home panel its due
to things like: having every room on its own circuit, a large number of
2 pole circuits that could have been divided up a little better between
fewer breakers, large amount of dedicated circuits....
Now I may take some heat for what I just said because a misconception
that you can only put X number of outlets (Receptacles & lighting)
on a circuit in a residence. There is no such rule. The rule is 3
volt-amps per square ft. The number of general lighting circuits is then
determined from that.
Heres one using 20 amp branch circuits circuits:
2000 sq ft x 3volt-amps = 6000 volt-amps / 120 volts = 50 amps
50 amps / 20amps = 2.5 20 amp circuits or
3 - 20 amp circuits or
2 - 20 amp & 1 - 15amp
Heres the same example using 15 amp branch circuits
2000 sq ft x 3volt-amps = 6000 volt-amps / 120 volts = 50 amps
50 amps / 15amps = 3.33 circuits or
4 4 - 15 amp circuits
I personally will always install more circuits than the calculations
require as a minimum for general lighting and receptacles as I feel
the code is somewhat slack in that dept. But in the el-cheapo projects
I've done, where the builder won't pay for more than the min. I have
installed to the min. and it will work fine and it's safe just not very
convenient. You find that if you do blow a breaker for whatever reason,
a large portion of the house is now in the dark.
Keep in mind that all of the service equipment manufactured is based
on these rules. If you decide to be very liberal with the amount of
circuits you may run out of space especially if the service entrance
was sized using the tables mentioned earlier.
I know this didn't really answer the question "how many breakers can you
put in a panel" but it does provide some background on why the panels
are sized the way they are.
The only rule that comes to mind is one that states the computed
load supplied by the feeders cannot exceed the feeder rating. The
handbook goes on to say that this is regardless of the sum of the
overcurrent devices. The example shown has a 250 amp breaker feeding
3 -300 amp sub-panels
art 220 branch circuit and feeder calculations
b feeders
220-10 General
(The handbook version has some extra drawings that help
explain)
|
290.670 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Nov 13 1992 15:19 | 7 |
| Re: .46
There are such formulas for individual circuits. I couldn't find one in
the NEC regarding the panel as a whole, though obviously the main breaker
has to be suitably rated as compared to the service cable.
Steve
|
290.671 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Fri Nov 13 1992 15:50 | 21 |
|
Re: .last few
Why does this rule about the maximum number of breakers per box
exist? It makes perfect safety sense why the individual breakers exist
(to keep the wires' capacities from being over-burdened) and it makes
perfect safety sense why the overall main breaker box has an amperage
limit. (Keeping the supply line to the house/whatever from being
over-burdened.) It seems to me, however, that if I had a 200A main
circuit breaker box that had 30 breakers (of >10A each for this
example) and try to run 10A of load through each breaker, the main
breaker will trip. Everything worked correctly to protect any wire
from becoming overly-burdened: I don't see any safety issue here.
(There is certainly the convenience, or lack thereof, issue of having
to reset the main breaker, of course.) Why is this kind of configuration
illegal?
Incidently, this is a purely hypothetical question. My house just
has a standard box and I have no thoughts of changing this...
-craig
|
290.672 | ? | SPEZKO::LEMIEUX | | Fri Nov 13 1992 16:48 | 33 |
|
< Why does this rule about the maximum number of breakers per box
< exist?
It doesn't exist to my knowledge. Thats what I was trying to say in my
previous reply. You have the theory correct when you said:
< It makes perfect safety sense why the individual breakers exist
< (to keep the wires' capacities from being over-burdened) and it makes
< perfect safety sense why the overall main breaker box has an amperage
< limit. (Keeping the supply line to the house/whatever from being
< over-burdened.) It seems to me, however, that if I had a 200A main
< circuit breaker box that had 30 breakers (of >10A each for this
< example) and try to run 10A of load through each breaker, the main
< breaker will trip.
Thats the way its supposed to work. If the service is sized correctly
according to the formulas provided by the NEC.
I've been doing this sort of thing for a long time and I don't know
of any article in the code (nec) that specifically says X number
breakers per panel max. If someone can find it please post a reply
to this note pointing to the article. Inquiring minds want to know :')
PS. Inspectors are not always right either.
|
290.673 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Nov 13 1992 18:23 | 4 |
| There is certainly a NEC absolute limit of 42 breakers per panelboard. I
don't have my copy handy to cite the reference, though.
Steve
|
290.674 | I have one on my desk..... | SPEZKO::LEMIEUX | | Fri Nov 13 1992 18:56 | 8 |
| Hi Steve,
Come on over to my office Monday. I have mine in the office. I really
want to find this one. I'll send my office number to you. Your at ZKO right?
later
paul
|
290.675 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Nov 13 1992 19:58 | 4 |
| Well, Monday I'll be in Las Vegas (at COMDEX). But I'll try to log in
tonight or tomorrow and post the citation.
Steve
|
290.676 | Steve is correct..I found the rule | SPEZKO::LEMIEUX | | Sun Nov 15 1992 20:29 | 24 |
| Hi,
I found it! Sure enough there is paragraph on it. I won't type the
whole thing in but here is the title if anybody else wants to look it
up:
Art 384-15 Number of overcurrent devices on one panelboard.
The limit is 42 and the panel must designed so that it prevents adding
more than 42 breakers.....
So the way around this if you need more than 42 circuits is to add
a sub-panel...say a 24 circuit 100 amp main lug only panel. Feed it
from the 200 amp main panel via a 100 amp 2 pole breaker. As long as
the total load on both panels (not the sum of the breakers) does not
exceed the requirments of the 200 amp main breaker panel your all set.
Use the formulas in the rear of the NEC book to determine your total
load.
Did this help or only muddy the waters? This has been going on so
long now I've kinda lost track of the original question...
Paul
|
290.677 | deep thought went into NEC | SMURF::WALTERS | | Mon Nov 16 1992 11:28 | 8 |
|
42? That's also the answer to "life, the universe & everything"
according to the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy. Strange powers
at work here.....
C.
|
290.678 | 42 answer to "life, the universe & everything" | SPEZKO::LEMIEUX | | Mon Nov 16 1992 13:51 | 11 |
|
Yeah that is a little strange isn't it.......I'd Love to know how they
really arrived at that number for panelboard .....I can see it now code
committe in session: "we need to limit it somewhere....Hey, you know I just
read this great book.....":')
later
Paul
|
290.679 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Mon Nov 16 1992 18:24 | 5 |
| RE: Last several...
The Hitchhikers Guide series also point out that it has been
proven that the ultimate answer and the ultimate question cannot
be known simultaneously in the same universe.
|
290.680 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Is the electric chair UL approved? | Mon Nov 16 1992 18:40 | 13 |
| A semi-serious answer:
I noticed many 3-phase breaker boxes also have a total of 42 breakers max.
To balance evenly among 3 phases the number chosen should be a multiple of
3 for 3 phase boxes. It should be 2 for single phase 120/240 boxes, and
also due to how boxes have 2 vertical rows of breakers.
So whatever number is chosen should be a multiple of 6, which 42 is, if a
single number is used for both single-phase and 3-phase boxes.
Now why 42 and not, say, 36, or 48, or some other multiple of 6 is another
question.
-Mike
|
290.701 | No fuse, a spark, no power | IAMOK::MAZZONE | | Tue Apr 20 1993 12:10 | 13 |
| Yesterday I had to remove some hard-wired wall sconces to do some
wallpaper removal. I taped up the wires and the whole area to protect
it from getting wet. We also removed the fuse to cut the circuit.
Last night, while removing the tape, there was a spark as a wire hit
a piece of metal. We were surprised, as we had thought that, without
the circuit, there shouldn't be any live wires.
After re-installing the fuse, we don't have any power. I'm hoping it's
a simple problem, that won't require bringing in an electrician, but I
can't tell. In the meantime, I have visions of the whole burning to
the ground.
Does anyone have any suggestions where to start?
|
290.702 | Did you replace the right fuse? | TALLIS::KOCH | DTN227-3133 ... If you don't look good, DEC doesn't look good. | Tue Apr 20 1993 12:30 | 9 |
| >... hard-wired wall sconces ... I taped up the wires ... [&] also removed
>the fuse to cut the circuit. ... while removing the tape, there was a
>spark as a wire hit a piece of metal. After re-installing the fuse, we
>don't have any power.
>
>Does anyone have any suggestions where to start?
Sounds like you removed the wrong fuse, and the wires were alive the
whole time. Replace the blown fuse.
|
290.703 | | SOLVIT::REDZIN::DCOX | | Tue Apr 20 1993 14:04 | 26 |
| And before you ever again touch household wires, pick up a neon bulb
line tester (sometimes called a pigtail tester) at your local hardware
store. It is a small device consisting of a neon bulb in a pen-sized
plastic shell with two leads attached. The neon bulb will glow if the
leads are placed across "hot" lines. When you think you have killed
the feed, test between the wires as well as between each wire and the
box. If the bulb glows, either you killed the wrong circuit or you
have other problems (that, from the read of you note, are beyond your
expertise).
The easiest way to test is to undo the wire nut around the WHITE leads
first and then test between them and the box. Since the WHITE leads
are SUPPOSED to go to the ground terminal(s) in your fuse/CB box, any
glow of the bulb at this point would indicate a potentially serious
problem. Then CAREFULLY remove the wire nut from the BLACK leads
taking caution not to let any of them touch the box nor the white
leads. Then test between the BLACK leads and the WHITE leads and
between the BLACK leads and the box. It may seem overkill to some, but
I have been working AC power wiring for 35 or so years and still
remember falling from the ladder after grabbing HOT leads from a
circuit I had killed at the box. Fool me once, shame.......
As always,
FWIW
Dave
|
290.704 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Apr 20 1993 14:14 | 6 |
| Even better, you can get a non-contact voltage tester that has a LED which
glows if it is brought near a live wire. Radio Shack had them on sale for
under $9 recently, I bought mine for about $12 at Home Depot. Handy and
safe, as you can test even before you start disconnecting wires.
Steve
|
290.705 | how does "non-contact" voltage tester work? | COAL05::WHITMAN | Acid Rain Burns my Bass | Tue Apr 20 1993 17:17 | 9 |
| <Even better, you can get a non-contact voltage tester that has a LED which
<glows if it is brought near a live wire. Radio Shack had them on sale for
<under $9 recently, I bought mine for about $12 at Home Depot. Handy and
<safe, as you can test even before you start disconnecting wires.
Don't these only work if there is something in the line drawing current, or
is it like a flourescent tube where you effectively see the standing waves?
Al
|
290.706 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Apr 20 1993 17:21 | 5 |
| RE: .4
Standing Waves? Thats a new one on me.
Marc H.
|
290.707 | | SOLVIT::REDZIN::DCOX | | Tue Apr 20 1993 17:35 | 7 |
| RE .3
I understand that they only work when current is flowing. If, however,
they work in live, but non-active, circuits, they would be a MUCH
better choice than the pigtale.
Dave
|
290.708 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Apr 20 1993 18:04 | 11 |
| Re: .4, .6
They don't require current to be flowing. I've tested this a number of times.
I think it's due to a very slight leakage to ground, or something like that.
I know that if I take my digital voltmeter and plug one lead into the hot
side of a live outlet, that the meter will read somewhere between 12 and 40
volts, even though the other lead is not connected. I suspect the sensor
uses the same technique. You can even use them to trace wires in walls
and test for polarity on outlets.
Steve
|
290.709 | saw it once 25 years ago | COAL05::WHITMAN | Acid Rain Burns my Bass | Tue Apr 20 1993 21:03 | 11 |
| < Standing Waves? Thats a new one on me.
The details are fuzzy to me as it's been a long time.
One of the demos they gave us in Electronic Tech school, some 25 years ago,
to show a standing wave, a fluorescent tube was placed close to a wire
carrying an RF signal and the tube (not connected to anything) would light only
at the peaks of the wave. If it worked on a fairly low power RF signal, perhaps
the same principle would work for 60 hz, high power lines as well.
Al
|
290.710 | multi-purpose tool | SMURF::WALTERS | | Wed Apr 21 1993 12:58 | 15 |
|
The one I have is a dual-purpose tool, it detects live circuits
without a working appliance drawing current, and can be switched to
"metal dector" mode to detect/trace wires that are not connected to
a circuit - so you don't saw through a disconnected circuit.
Instead of an LED, it has a tone that pulses in sync with the wave,
(can tell 110v from 240v) or moderates in volume depending on the
distance from the metal object. As it can also detect studs by finding
the nails, or trace copper piping routes, it's one of my most useful
tools.
Regards,
Colin
|
290.711 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Apr 21 1993 13:51 | 7 |
| Re: .9
Yes, I've seen those - very handy, but a bit fancier and more expensive than
the model I have which is about the size of a marker pen and just clips
in your pocket.
Steve
|
290.712 | sounds handy | COAL05::WHITMAN | Acid Rain Burns my Bass | Wed Apr 21 1993 16:05 | 19 |
| < The one I have is a dual-purpose tool, it detects live circuits
< without a working appliance drawing current, and can be switched to
< "metal dector" mode to detect/trace wires that are not connected to
< a circuit - so you don't saw through a disconnected circuit.
<
< Instead of an LED, it has a tone that pulses in sync with the wave,
< (can tell 110v from 240v) or moderates in volume depending on the
< distance from the metal object. As it can also detect studs by finding
< the nails, or trace copper piping routes, it's one of my most useful
< tools.
Colin,
It sounds as "handy as a pocket on a shirt".
Where do I find one of these things? How much does it cost?
Al
|
290.713 | I'll check the documents | SMURF::WALTERS | | Wed Apr 21 1993 16:35 | 8 |
|
Mine cost me about twelve pounds in the UK - $18 at todays rate.
The only place I've seen a similar thing in the US was at "Brookstone"
or "Sharper Image", but I'm sure they must be available at places
like Home Depot?
Colin
|
290.714 | Follow the crowds to Spag's... | AIDEV::ROLLER | Life's a batch, then you SYS$EXIT | Wed Apr 21 1993 17:00 | 4 |
| I got one of these handy little tools at, where else, Spags. Radio
Shack and a few other places like that carry them too.
Ken
|
290.715 | Can it...? | DAVE::MITTON | Token rings happen | Wed Apr 21 1993 19:12 | 13 |
| Hmmm, can this gadget do for real, a trick I learned a while back...
If I hold one end of a neon bulb tester, and touch the other to Hot,
it glows weakly. This test helps me distinguish Hot from Neutral when
there is no ground around.
What is happening is that my body is taking some AC coupled energy
from the Hot.
Dave.
(sort of like how TV antenna's always work better when you touch them.
I think if I could build the electronic equivalent circuit of a finger
touch, I would have a real hot product... ;-)
|
290.716 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Apr 21 1993 20:25 | 9 |
| Re: .14
The gadget I use can tell you which wire is Hot.
As for your gadget - these have been around for years. You can buy them
to turn any table lamp into a "touch on" lamp, and some tabletop fans have
a "touch the shroud and it stops" feature.
Steve
|
290.717 | I never tell anyone else to do something I wouldn't do | 20438::MCCARTHY | COMPUTER: end simulation | Thu Apr 22 1993 10:40 | 12 |
| >> If I hold one end of a neon bulb tester, and touch the other to Hot,
>> it glows weakly. This test helps me distinguish Hot from Neutral when
>> there is no ground around.
>>
>> What is happening is that my body is taking some AC coupled energy
>> from the Hot.
Not something I would recommend. If someone happens to be leaning against a
grounded piece of metal somewhere, or standing in water etc you will have 120 V
going through your body.
bjm
|
290.718 | mains test screwdriver | SMURF::WALTERS | | Thu Apr 22 1993 12:37 | 10 |
| RE: Glow tester
No, but I have a small screwdriver with a built-in neon and a large
ohm-value resistor that does the same trick. You just put your finger
on the top of the screwdriver. I've used it on 240V circuits and it
makes no difference whether you touch ground. (as long as you have the
right end of the screwdriver).
Colin
|
290.575 | Moving Main Power lines? | 15377::SDTMKT::WALKER | | Wed May 26 1993 17:55 | 31 |
| Hi,
Has anyone had any experience in moving the main electrical lines into the
house. We're in an older, wonderfully established neighboorhood. It has
above ground power strung from the poles to the tip of our roof. The
wires run down to the meter and then into the basement and the box.
The problem is that I would like to put a deck/screened porch/sunroom (haven't
decided which yet) off that side of the house. The meter is pretty much the
same height as the deck/floor would be.
A couple of things we've been thinking of:
o Dig the trenches and ask/pay for the electric company to move the wiring
underground and relocate the meter in the process
o Build an accessible channel/box around the power lines up the side of
the house allowing a cut out in the flooring for the meter, but boxing
and trimming so that it could be a built in table.
o We have a 60ft long house with a shop area that has no power to it. Although
we have 100 amp service, we could use 200 to get the shop set up and
functional. Of course the shop area is on the absolute other side of the
house. Perhaps we should have the power relocated to the center of the
and upgraded.
Any ideas around cost and/or feasibility? Any other suggestions? Any gotcha's
that you've experienced doing similar things?
Anne
|
290.576 | | PASTA::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Wed May 26 1993 19:13 | 23 |
| Aren't there notes regarding this subject listed in 1111.1? I'm sure I've
read a lot of them (and entered some, too).
Anyway, briefly, if you want to upgrade to 200A, I recommend that you
run a new service wire to the location of your choice, perhaps even
in your shop if that's positioned conveniently relative to the power
poles. Then run a cable from that box to your existing 100A box.
Rewire that box to be a subpanel instead of a main panel -- all that
requires is separating out the bare copper ground wires and the white
neutral wires onto separate conductors back to your new main panel.
Anternaetly, you could convert your existing box to 200A and runsome
heavy gauge wire to your shop. This is preferable if you need more
room in that part of the house for extra circuits.
Personally, I'd recommend going to underground sevice, but that's because
I don't like the look of overhead wires. Underground is safer (e.g.,
this past winter I had to run out after a storm and chop branches off
a tree that was leaning against my wires), but from what I've heard,
I don't feel that that is a big enough consideration by itself.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
290.577 | 2c worth | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Thu May 27 1993 10:57 | 17 |
|
Well, if your going to 200A. your going to need a new feed wire.
So now's the time to change things. If the meter is in the way,
move it. The cheep way might be to shift the location of the
meter up a few feet. Put a mast up if the incoming wires are
to close to the deck and also to protect wires form little fingers!
Underground will cost more, but it will be outofsight.....
I dont know what your "shop" requires for power but it could be
as simple as a few lines into the area, or runing a feed from
the main to a subpanel. I would tend to keep the main panel where
it is if thats no problem only because all your wires are there.
JD
|
290.578 | | TUXEDO::KEEGAN | Peter Keegan | Mon May 31 1993 21:49 | 7 |
| When I built my deck, I had to move the main feed around the
corner of the house from the deck AND enclose the wires in
2" steel conduit to meet code. Cost was a couple of hundred
dollars.
-Peter
|
290.579 | I have to do a similar thing in MA | 19584::BPORTER | | Tue Jun 08 1993 17:48 | 5 |
| I have a similar thing to do. I've had an electrician
tell it will cost about 200$, this does not involve
any new cable. I've had another offer to put my street
drop underground for around $1100, distance is about
60 feet.
|
290.681 | Updating to 200 AMP service | MICROW::SEVIGNY | | Thu Aug 05 1993 17:49 | 12 |
|
Does anyone know a *very rough* estimate for upgrading from 60AMP
service to 200AMP service?
It is for a small ranch-style log home with all electrical wiring
exposed to the basement. House is about 150' from the road.
Thanks,
Marc
|
290.682 | Very rough ball-park | VICKI::DODIER | Food for thought makes me hungry | Thu Aug 05 1993 19:38 | 13 |
| You can probably do the rough parts yourself. Look to see if you
can find a 200 amp panel with the same brand name as yours and you may
be able to re-use all of your existing breakers minus the main. This
could save you considerable money. You can check an HQ, Home Depot, or
other similar fliers to get ballparks on the panel/breaker costs.
You can probably figure on about $200 for the weather head, wire,
pipe, and fittings. Assuming the job is straight forward labor wise, it
will probably take two people one 8 hour day tops. This would work out
to approx. $400-500 labor. I don't remember if there was an Electric Co.
disconnect/reconnect fee, but it would not be much if there is.
Ray
|
290.683 | | QUARK::LIONEL | I brake for rainbows | Thu Aug 05 1993 23:12 | 7 |
| It cost me $800 to do an upgrade (electrician supplied new
panel and breakers, ran new line to new meter box, hooked up all
existing lines). The power company charged me nothing for the
new meter or the replacement line from the street. Your mileage
may vary.
Steve
|
290.684 | $800 bucks is a good rough estimate for 200 amp upgrade | SPEZKO::LEMIEUX | | Fri Aug 06 1993 14:48 | 30 |
|
Steve's price in the previous note is in the ballpark for about 80% of the
service changes I've done in NH. He is in New Hampshire and I believe is
serviced by Public service is that correct Steve? So if you are in NH with
PSCO the price is about right if you have it done by an electrical contractor
If you are in Mass. or another location (in NH some of the coops require this)
that requires the electrician to supply meter box and riser to the roof it's
probably going to be 75 - 150 dollars more depending on how far the riser
has to be run to get the proper clearances. PSCO in NH does the riser and
supplies the meter box.
There's one gotcha that could cost you more and that is if you end up needing a
rigid conduit riser to get additional clearance over the roof or if the conduit
is required by local codes(in the place of SEU cable). Newburyport MA used to
require rigid risers on all residential services for example.
My suggestion is to get at least three prices and have the contractors spell
out what they are giving you for the money. Also remember that no two jobs are
exactly alike and the prices you see here in notes may not accurately reflect
what your service change should cost you.
Have fun
Paul
|
290.685 | shop around | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Fri Aug 06 1993 16:27 | 5 |
|
$1000 for new service entry and 200amp, 40Brk box, plus wire.
JD
|
290.686 | | QUARK::LIONEL | I brake for rainbows | Fri Aug 06 1993 17:16 | 8 |
| Re: .7
Yes, I am in Nashua, NH and am serviced by PSNH.
One cost that can start to build is the 4/0 feed wire from the
meter box to the new panel. That stuff's expensive!
Steve
|
290.687 | Contractors were hungry... | MANTHN::EDD | Kraftwerk, Unplugged | Sat Aug 07 1993 10:56 | 5 |
| Two years ago I got 3 estimates, all around $500.
I thought the job surprisingly inexpensive!
Edd
|
290.688 | $900 | CNTROL::KING | | Mon Aug 09 1993 12:03 | 1 |
| Central Mass $900 - last month
|
290.689 | $700. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | Free Stupidity Screening $5 | Tue Aug 10 1993 16:07 | 4 |
| western mass: $700, including the meter box and riser (2 stories), with
the old box wired as a sub from the new panel. This past winter.
...tom
|
290.312 | subpanel sizing | HELIX::LUNGER | | Fri Dec 03 1993 15:58 | 34 |
| Question on sizing an additional subpanel:
I've now got a 200 amp 40-position square-D panel. 38 positions are used,
and i'm adding about 900 sq feet of livable space to the house. the space
requires only general purpose branch circuits (no new kitchen/bathroom/etc).
Instead of getting tandem breakers (code allows me 2 of 'em on the main panel)
I'll use the remainder 2 positions to feed a new subpanel next to the main
panel. Compared to using tandems, a new subpanel feels like the right thing
to do!
What if any NEC rule is the high limit for a subpanel in this situation?
Correct me if wrong (or confirm if correct please), but doesn't the NEC
allow me any size I want (protected of course with appropriate breakers)?
Seems to me any NEC mandated calculations is of what I minimally
need (ie: 2-3 branch circuits), and has no bearing on any maximum I could
provide for.
I'm thinking of getting a 16 position subpanel rated at 100 amps. I'll put
a 60 amp breaker to feed it, and use size 4 awg copper (only need 6 awg,
but then I can move in the future to a bigger breaker if I need to).
Can I not put any size breaker I want to feed the subpanel though?
Whats to guide me NEC-wise as far as sizing the subpanel breaker? for
example, If I only have one branch circuit, then the main panel breaker
feeding the subpanel might be 20 or 30 amps; if I have 16 breakers, then
a 100 amp breaker is more in line.
Here is a purely hypothetical theoretical question to help me understand
NEC requirements: could one put 20 100-amp protected subpanels fed off of a
200-amp 40 position main panel? could one put a 20-amp protected subpanel
and have 16 20 amp branch circuits on the subpanel?
thanks!
|
290.313 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, PATHWORKS for Windows NT | Mon Dec 06 1993 04:07 | 5 |
| > Instead of getting tandem breakers (code allows me 2 of 'em on the main panel)
What's a tandem breaker? Is it the same thing as those
duplex breakers that fix in the footprint of a standard
single (yet still trip individually)?
|
290.314 | you say tomato I say .... | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | Back to BASICs | Mon Dec 06 1993 09:02 | 7 |
| >> What's a tandem breaker? Is it the same thing as those
>> duplex breakers that fix in the footprint of a standard
>> single (yet still trip individually)?
Yes. I've never heard them refered to as "duplex" though, always "tandem".
bjm
|
290.492 | Liability is a problem | SOLVIT::NNGUYEN | | Tue Mar 15 1994 15:13 | 10 |
| Home Depot in Nashua used to have a cross-reference table for circuit
breakers. Recently they remove this table the reason was they don't
want to be liable for any problem. However, if you ask they will
suggest a replacement.
It is the liability that scares people off. It is harder to get a
straight answer for anything.
/Neil
|
290.493 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Mar 15 1994 19:08 | 4 |
| RE: .22
Lawyers have ruined the country.
Marc H.
|
290.494 | Same maker per code. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Wed Mar 16 1994 09:54 | 15 |
| RE: .-2
The problem with compatible breakers is that it violatyes code. The
electrical code states that the panel only contain approved breakers.
This usually translates into those listed by the manufacturer of the
panel, which translates into breakers of the same brand...
This is mainly for product liability purposes. Without this matching
of brands, the panel maker would fight the breaker manufacturer etc...
Dan
P.S. I agree it is a pain sometimes, but better safe than sorry!
|
290.495 | what if you can't get them? | SMURF::WALTERS | | Wed Mar 16 1994 11:25 | 9 |
|
I don't think so. I didn't fancy driving to Manchester NH for some ITE
Gould, so I used GCE after checking with the town codes. If a manufacturer
goes out of business, you can hardly expect a town to require a
householder to upgrade the whole box just for one extra breaker.
C
|
290.496 | Printed right on the box | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Wed Mar 16 1994 18:43 | 16 |
|
Many breakers list the boxes they'll fit on the package. Of course when
you buy them in the Home Depot bins, the packages aren't there because
they've been bought in bulk instead.
Another little quirk:
Many of the Home Depot type of breakers are domestic as opposed to
industrial. Industrial breakers tend to be more of a slow-trip type and
don't trip at the slightest provocation.
For instance, the 20 amp breaker supplying my dining room outlets kept
tripping when the floor sander was being started. I went down and pulled
out the el-cheapo electrician-supplied breaker (not the same brand and my
panel, btw) and replaced it with the correct one for the panel and we could
run the sander AND a drop light or two.
|
290.497 | Calrification | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Thu Mar 17 1994 09:50 | 18 |
| re: .25
Using your example of ITE breakers...
As far as I know the following are all made by the same parent company
and are usable together:
Westinghouse
ITE
Bryant
Challanger breakers should only be used within Challanger panels.
GE is the same way.
Note: I am not saying that any of hte above won't fit. I'm saying
that non-grouped name brands are technically not up to code. I have
verified this with BOCA (I'm a member).
Dan
|
290.498 | | RCFLYR::CAVANAGH | Jim Cavanagh SHR1-4/H8 237-2252 | Thu Mar 17 1994 12:28 | 5 |
|
Anyone know who carries Westinghouse breakers in the Marlboro area?
|
290.499 | Westinghouse breakers at WESCO in Worcester | LANDO::DROBNER | Argon/Krypton Systems Engineering | Thu Mar 17 1994 13:42 | 8 |
| The only place I was able to find a main disconnect breaker (200A)
Westinghouse to replace a bad one on my house last summer - was at
"WESCO Counter" in Worcester, MA they are located just off of Gold
Star Blvd. around the corner from Percy's.
Be forwarned Westinghouse breakers are EXPENSIVE.
/Howard
|
290.500 | How many? | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Thu Mar 17 1994 15:41 | 9 |
| RE: .29
How many breakers do you need? I still have a few left over (ITE type)
from my original installation. I can get replacements when I go up to
Nashua in a few weeks.
Dan
|
290.501 | | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Thu Mar 17 1994 16:47 | 2 |
|
What about Square D?
|
290.502 | | RCFLYR::CAVANAGH | Jim Cavanagh SHR1-4/H8 237-2252 | Thu Mar 17 1994 18:02 | 5 |
|
Thanks for the info on the Westinghouse beakers. I need 2 so I can wire in
my new darkroom and additional workshop outlets. I'll be in Worc tomorrow
at the Greendale Mall so I can just swing around the corner and pick some
up!
|
290.503 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Mar 17 1994 18:59 | 5 |
| Square D breakers are unique. (There's actually two lines of Square D
breakers; the cheaper ones may be in the "interchangeable group", for all
I know.)
Steve
|
290.504 | they saw a market and went for it... | TLE::MCCARTHY | Back to BASICs | Thu Mar 17 1994 20:10 | 7 |
| RE: Square D
Several years ago Square D came out with a "residental" line. Yes they are in
the interchangable group. Their commercial brand is more expensive and ONLY
Square D breakers will fit.
bjm
|
290.505 | Where in Nashua? | SMURF::WALTERS | | Fri Mar 18 1994 12:29 | 8 |
|
Re 30,
Dan - Where to you get them in Nashua? I'd better replace my GE
ones.....
Colin
|
290.506 | | MIYATA::LEMIEUX | | Fri Mar 18 1994 16:12 | 10 |
|
Electrical supply of Milford has some. 603 672 1200. call before going to make
sure they have the ones you want. Tell them I sent you.
Like I've stated a few times before if you look at the label in the panel it
will tell you what breakers are UL listed for use in the panel. If you can't
find a label call the manufacturer and they can tell you which are UL listed.
The NEC requires the labels to be there.
Paul
|
290.507 | Ralph Pill Electric. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Mon Mar 21 1994 09:44 | 6 |
| RE: .-2
I've gotten ITE breakers at Ralph Pill. Be careful though, without a
contracter's account, they may be expensive.
Dan
|
290.508 | ITE =/= Westinghouse | WMOIS::BOUDREAU_C | RIGHT_KEY_BABY__WRONG_KEYHOLE_YO | Tue Mar 29 1994 23:40 | 18 |
| RE ITE,WESTINGHOUSE BREAKERS.
ITE breakers are NOT manufactured by the same of even close to
Westinghouse/Bryant. ITE is owned by Gould (now mostly of Euro-design).
ITE panels, breakers are not as good IMHO. They are Cheap in price and
quality. I was selling them for a couple of years, but switched to
Westinghouse for a better product line.
Bryant has always been a division of Westinghouse. Recently (last
couple of years) the Bryant division (for panels, breakers) no longer
exist. There may be some NOS out there but it won't be for long. The
newer Westinghouse panels will allow type "BR" breakers (BR=Bryant).
The older Bryant panels will not (technically allow) Westinghouse BR
breakers, because at the time, they did not exist (the Bryant line
covered the "plug in panel market")
FYI
|
290.842 | What to do when lightning strikes? | OROGEN::GOODMAN | | Wed Jul 27 1994 20:43 | 20 |
|
Monday night I came home to find no power in the house. I was told there was a
lightning strike near the house and the power went out in the house. PSNH
was called, came by and replaced the transformer. When the power came
on all of the electric smoke detectors were on. They had to be shut off
at the panel.
I found out that some of the electronics were toasted including
television, receivers, television antenna Preamp, modem, and all of the
hard wired smoke detectors. The phones are having problems. I don't
think the list is complete yet.
Has anyone else gone through this? Any issues with the insurance
company? Should I assume all of the surge protectors are dead?
What should I do to check the electrical and phone wiring? All input is
welcome.
Robin
|
290.843 | | MKOTS3::GELE | ARISE,SHINE,FOR THE LIGHT HAS COME | Thu Jul 28 1994 06:30 | 7 |
| Something similar did happen to me. After a storm, the negative or
ground(dont know for sure) at the pole was torn off causing 220 volts
to come into the house everywhere. Lightbulbs were exploding, my cd
player got fried,along with the dishwasher,central vac...A real mess.
Sylvain
|
290.844 | have the wiring checked.... | TPSYS::WEST | | Thu Jul 28 1994 12:45 | 34 |
|
My friend just had this happen two weeks ago (he also had a house fire and
lots of smoke and water damage, too). Also, another acquaintance had a
power transformer just blow up on his street, with similar electrical damage.
In both cases the damage was similar, as is the fix.
1. Contact your insurance company! -- you should be covered for all
damages.
2. Get EVERYTHING electrical replaced -- anything that was plugged in is
suspect, if not fried already. (Hope you have replacement value
coverage). Even if if seems like it is OK, anything that has gotten
that kind of jolt probably has a lot shorter life -- and you won't
prove anything a year from now with your insurance company
3. As far as house wiring, it could be suspect, also.... (my neighbor has to
have ALL of his replaced, with all of the walls getting torn open to
change it out). If wiring which has insulation rated for 110 or 220
volts is nailed with kilovolts, the insulation can break down and
cause future shorts or fires......
There is a test called hi-potting (hi-potential testing), where
thousands of volts are placed on wires in a controlled fashion, to
test for leakage. If insulation has been damaged, then the voltage
will leak (the readings will drop) and you know that whole line has
to be replaced. I would have my whole house hi-potted by a testing
service.
4. If you have permanent telephone or CATV wiring or alarms, I would have that
wiring checked also....
Good luck.
|
290.845 | more to do..... | TPSYS::WEST | | Thu Jul 28 1994 13:24 | 17 |
|
After you talk to your insurance company, get an electrician from your
area to check your house wiring (have him bill the insurance company,
with their prior approval). If he can find evidence of damage to
the house wiring anywhere, then it is a good shot you can get it
replaced. My friend had the city building inspector come in and
verify that it needed replacement, so the insurance company had nothing
else to do but replace it.
Also -- until the work is done, where do you live? (do you have
power in the house now?). Temporary living quarters will be necessary
if they are rewiring and replastering your whole house - dont forget
that.
Bob
|
290.846 | Going thru it Now ! | MR4DEC::CMARCONE | | Thu Jul 28 1994 17:11 | 51 |
| This sounds all too familiar. Our house (less than 9 months old) got
hit on July 7th. Here's what we did.
1. Called Metropolitan immediately. They gave me a claim number and
advised me to call and electrician. Told me they would send someone
out to look at the structural damage (we heard from him within 24
hours). I had to list over the phone all the content damage and a
brief assesment of the structural damage. Any content over $100 they
asked me to have a repair person look at to see if it could be fixed.
They then asked me to fax/mail any and all invoices and gave me a
number and extension to call if I had questions or problems. They also
told me to call an electrician as well to inspect the house and give an
estimate.
2. Called an electrician and had him come to inspect the house. It
cost us $50 for an inspection fee, the insurance said they would cover
it. This is the main part of the claim that is still pending. The
electrician included content replacement (whole house fan, cordless
phone, answering machines, GFI's, hard wired fire detectors, outlets,
ceiling fans, dimmer switches, etc.), as well as wiring and labor.
3. The insurance sent out a restoration company. He inspected the
damage to the house (outside siding, plaster, paint, wood, etc.). We
decided to hire him to do the work mainly because he would deal with
the insurance company directly, we only need to pay him our deductible.
He will begin work this week (less than three weeks after the strike).
4. Called the garage door installers who originally did our work.
They were out the next day to repair the garage door opener and billed
us directly. I faxed this to the insurance rep and he is sending a
check via mail.
5. Called the t.v. repair man. He came and got the t.v., fixed and
delivered it. We paid him and the insurance company has already
reimbursed us for that expense (three day turn around from the time I
faxed the invoice).
An important note to make: Our house is livable. It is our master
bedroom that had been damaged and the outside of the house. If you
have to make other living arrangements you need to tell the insurance
company.
We also made a decision to have the electrician put a power surge on
the panel and install lightening rods. When this is completed I plan
to send the insurance company copies of the invoice for work completed
as an FYI. I figured this would let them know we've done something to
try to prevent this from happening again.
BTW - we are the third house in a neighborhood of twenty to be hit in
six months !!! Guess it's a "hot" spot !
|
290.847 | I hate this ... | OROGEN::GOODMAN | | Thu Jul 28 1994 19:56 | 12 |
| The house wasn't hit, So I feel somewhat lucky. I also have full
replacement on the house and the contents.
I called the insurance company on Tuesday. The appraiser probably
called today. The insurance company says there have been alot of
lightning strikes this year. The electrician is coming by on Monday.
The invisible fence person is probably finishing up as I write this.
Now if I could only find someone who will climb my 100 foot TV tower to
replace the preamp.
Robin
|
290.848 | be careful out there!! | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Thu Jul 28 1994 21:10 | 17 |
| > Now if I could only find someone who will climb my 100 foot TV tower to
> replace the preamp.
100 ft TV tower??!!! This sounds like a major lightning rod to me!
Sounds like you're in a valley or such and I understand that you might
need this to get any reception at all, but it might be worthwile checking to
see if you can sheild this in some way. I'd be surprised if this
doesn't get hit again.
We've only sustained minor damage due to lightning, but we've had at least
3 separate incidents (well pump one time, modem another, and my wife the
third :( (but she's all right!)) and just this past week, an overhead
spotlight in the cathedral ceiling appeared to flash out right as a
bolt seemed to touch in the backyard. Don't know if it was stress due to
the lights flickering, or if it picked up some induced charge or such.
PeterT
|
290.597 | | NPSS::WADE | Network Systems Support | Tue Oct 18 1994 20:01 | 4 |
| So, if I have a 100 amp service (new house) and I see lights dim when for
example we are ironing can I assume that the 100 amp is insufficient?
|
290.598 | | WRKSYS::MORONEY | Hoink if you like Pigs! | Tue Oct 18 1994 21:29 | 9 |
| re .17:
Yes if the iron is on a different circuit from the lights.
If on the same circuit the circuit may be insufficient (a long run
of #14 for example) or bad contacts in it somewhere (get this fixed
if so!)
-Mike
|
290.599 | Too many additions! | MAIL2::BLACKMAN | As always..High on Life! | Wed Oct 19 1994 12:20 | 12 |
| I recently had CAC installed and had to up my service from 60 to 200.
Now when the CAC goes on, two of my circuits dim a bit. This happens
after the upgrade. Story goes that the circuits in my 40 year old
house are just a sham. They were/are going every which way, seems the
previous owners just kept adding and adding. I will be taking care of
this over the next couple of years. So, your lites will still dim
after the upgrade if they are overloaded with outlets etc.. and to
long.
-jon
|
290.600 | 200 amp may not help | MKOTS3::SCANLON | oh-oh. It go. It gone. Bye-bye. | Wed Oct 19 1994 14:40 | 13 |
| We have a similar problem with our 100 AMP service.
We had an electrician come out and look things over
and found two problems:
1.) the connection from the line to the house was
defective. The electric company replaced this
free of charge. This turned a noticible problem
into a semi-noticable one;
2.) We have a long run from the house to the transformer
If the run is too long we were told, you will get
some dimming no matter what;
Mary-Michael
|
290.315 | size of wire for 100 amp feeder | SSPADE::ARSENAULT | | Thu Oct 27 1994 16:30 | 32 |
| I am about install a 100 amp subpanel off a 200 amp panel. The cable
for this will be about 60-70 feet long.
I'm uncertain what size and type of cable I should use for this. I
understand I need four conductors: two hot, neutral, ground. And I
understand that the neutral and grounds in the subpanel must be separate.
Looking in the NEC, I'm not sure what table applies with respect to
ampacity. Tables 400-5(A) and (B) on 70-319 and 320 are for 'flexible
cords and cables' which I don't think applies.
Tables B-310-1, -2, and -3 seem to apply. They are for two or three
insulated conductors (multiconductor cable) either "in a raceway in free
air" (-1), "supported on a messenger" (2), or "in free air" (-3).
I assume that B-310-3 applies. I'll be running the cable through a
crawl space and through a full basement. Table B-310-3 says that for 60
degrees celsius (temperature rating) copper conductors 2 gauge will be
good for 92 amp and 1 gauge will be good for 107 amps. For
[copper-clad] aluminum conductors 1/0 carries 97 amps and 2/0 carries
111 amps. For both metals, the amperage goes up with the temperature
rating.
The essential question is: what kind of wire should I buy?
Copper or aluminum or copper-clad aluminum. Gauge? Temperature
rating?? Do I need to run the cable through a conduit? Exactly what
type of wire should I use? (This table lists: TC, MC, MI, UF, USE,
SNM.) What tools do I need to cut and bend this cable?
I don't think I have any problem with voltage drop on a run of this
size. Do you agree?
|
290.316 | | SSPADE::ARSENAULT | | Thu Oct 27 1994 20:17 | 3 |
| I just talked with the sales person at M&M Electrical Supply in Nashua.
He says that #2 aluminum is sufficient.
|
290.317 | I used #2 copper | BOBSBX::CHIQUOINE | Who audits the IRS? | Thu Oct 27 1994 22:47 | 9 |
| Another data point. When I had a 100 amp subpanel run from my
basement to my garage the electrician recommended #2 copper
(for a 30' run). Maybe that was overkill (I like it that way)
but you might want to get a second opinion. Then again, at
the price of aluminum vs. copper, you might prefer M&M's
suggestion.
Ken
|
290.318 | taught by master - personal preference | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | I'm still not ready | Fri Oct 28 1994 09:10 | 10 |
| I always use copper. You have to oversize (for example if you needed something
to handle 30A - with CA you could use #10, with AL you have to use #8 - I don't
think they have changed that rule).
They did mention that you need three conductor plus the ground right? And you
have to islolate the grounds from the neutrals in the sub-panel right?
I think you can get away with #4 copper - I think #2 copper will handle 150A.
bjm
|
290.319 | Correction, #3 wire | BGSDEV::CHIQUOINE | Who audits the IRS? | Fri Oct 28 1994 10:44 | 4 |
| I double checked the wire size to my subpanel this morning.
It's #3, not #2.
Ken
|
290.320 | Just something to think about | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Fri Oct 28 1994 11:59 | 18 |
| I think you wind up with more galvanic action between aluminum and
the main breaker set screws (steel ?) than you do with copper. I wound
up replacing my main last year because it was stuck closed. I broke
open the bad one after replacing it and found a trail of corrosion from
the set screws all the way into the contacts.
Now mind you, this is a 25 year old house and it was probably the
original breaker, but there's no telling how long it was like that as
it was broken the first time I tried to shut it off. This was on a
Cutler-Hammer breaker which is supposed to be a decent brand name.
You may want to check to see if you have the option of aluminum set
screws on a new breaker (screws that hold wire to the breaker). In my
case, the main breaker cost me $150 because it was an older style no
longer in production. Of course if it takes that long to happen, it
will likely be someone else's problem.
Ray
|
290.321 | Need a main breaker in the subpanel? | SSPADE::ARSENAULT | | Fri Oct 28 1994 13:24 | 11 |
| The guy at M&M also said that I need a main breaker in the subpanel in
addition to the breaker for the feed in the main panel. He said this
was necessary whenever sub is more than a short distance from the main.
I'm skeptical that he's right about this.
I asked the guy at Seaman's Supply in Nashua about that. He said that
some local inspectors require that additional main in the subpanel, but
that the NEC does not.
Comments?
|
290.322 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Oct 28 1994 13:29 | 3 |
| I'd want one there anyway...
Steve
|
290.323 | position subpanel close to sink | SSPADE::ARSENAULT | | Fri Oct 28 1994 13:33 | 15 |
| I am placing this subpanel in the basement of my new addition. The
addition will have a toilet and sink. I do not intend to finish the
basement. The best place for the subpanel is right next to the sink
(ignoring safety considerations).
Question: How close to the sink should the subpanel be placed?
If the panel is closed it's safe: it's grounded. If the panel grounding
is compromised and it becomes hot then it's dangerous, especially given
the cement floor. When the panel is open, it's dangerous. Touch it
wrong while it's on and ZAP.
Given all that, does having the panel close to a sink make it any more
dangerous? Does the code say anything about this?
|
290.324 | go for safest - forget best | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | I'm still not ready | Fri Oct 28 1994 15:27 | 10 |
| re: AL wires and corroded terminals
You are required on anything larger than #10 wire to apply Al-Lox or
AL-Lux - sorry I only know the brand name. It is supposed to slow
down the corrosion.
re: panel in basement near sink
Don't know about the code - I would assume at LEAST 6' away. Think
about a broken pipe aiming right at the panel !
bjm
|
290.325 | more brand names.. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | Packin' ta move.. | Mon Oct 31 1994 09:54 | 3 |
| or "no-al-ox" or "ox-gard" ..
...tom
|
290.326 | A main breaker *is* needed in the subpanel | WRKSYS::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Tue Nov 01 1994 18:59 | 20 |
| The NEC *does* require a breaker in the subpanel. Well, more
precisely, the NEC requires a disconnection method in the subpanel
if it is more than 10' (I think) wire run from the main panel or
if it has more than 6 breakers. The idea is that if the panel needs
to be disconnected in an emergency there should be just one switch
to pull, but definately no more than 6.
Given that the subpanel must have a disconnection method, the
simplest and cheapest way to do it is to buy a main panel and
use it as a subpanel, that is, with separated ground and neutral.
Yet another reason for putting a breaker in the subpanel is to
protect the wire back to the main panel. With a 100A (e.g.)
breaker in the subpanel, you need only use a wire rated for 100A
to the main panel. With no breaker there (e.g., with a knife
switch instead), you'd have to use a wire rated for the sum of
all of the individual breakers in the subpanel.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
290.327 | Close but not quite | WMOIS::BOUDREAU_C | So take your GreyPoupon my freind... | Tue Nov 01 1994 22:59 | 20 |
| re-.1
Larry,
The code does *not* require a main breaker (disconnect) in a sub
panel. However it is good practice, but not required. However, it is
required that the subpanel feed have adequate overcurrent protection at
the source (there are "tap" exception rules here but...) And the 6
disconnects are for MAIN disconnects (as in services)
So, if you have a 100 amp service, and want to install a 100 amp
subpanel, you could install a "tap" on the bus of the MAIN panel, run
the subfeed to a main "lug" (no switch) panel. Installation OK. the
Main breaker in the Main panel is protecting the subfeed, and the sub
panel. Not necessarily the best job, but an adequate installation.
Now increase the service size, or decrease the subpanel/feed size,
and you've got to protect the lower rated equipment accordingly.
CB
|
290.328 | the same effect, in reverse, with no sub breaker.. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | Packin' ta move.. | Thu Nov 03 1994 14:45 | 12 |
| when I had my 100 amp service upgraded to 200A (in a previous house, a
couple years ago) the electircian separated the neutral and ground in
the 'old' panel, removed the 'old' main breaker and replaced it with a
dummy (to which the feed from the 'new' panel was attached), and put a
100A breaker in the 'new' panel to feed the 'old'. These panels were
within a foot of each other, though.
There is some issue about the number of "motions" required to
'disconnect', though.. I don't really understand that one, or if it
even applies..
...tom
|
290.329 | | WRKSYS::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Tue Nov 08 1994 15:59 | 9 |
| WHy did he bother removing the old 100A breaker? Why not just leave
it in place? That would solve the "no more than 6 motions" issue,
though I doubt it applies when the panels are next to each other.
Enjoy,
Larry
PS -- I did much the same thing, except my new panel is 100' away
in a separate building.
|
290.537 | Advise on adding breaker box! | CSC32::R_IVERS | | Mon May 22 1995 18:28 | 53 |
| I am looking for advice on the best way to add breaker box capacity to
my house. Not in amperage capacity but in number of breakers. I
currently have a 200 amp Square D box. Because I have electric heat,
several of the breaker positions are taken up by the two pole 220V
breakers.
As I see it I have two options:
Option #1 - Add an additional breaker box by tying it directly into the
main line from the street. (I.E. the two boxes would be daisy-chained)
This option requires that I get the power from the street disabled
temporarily.
from
street
|| || ||
||==++==++===================||
|| ||==++===============|| ||
|| || ||===========|| || ||
|| || || || || ||
------------ ------------
| | | |
| original | | add-on |
| box | | box |
| | | |
------------ ------------
Option #2 - Connect the second box to the first by removing one of the
existing breakers and using that slot to feed the second box. Then
replace the removed breaker with a new one in the second box. This
limits the amperage capacity in the second box to the capacity of the
breaker in the main box.
from
street
|| || || |-------------|
|| || || | |-----------+---|
|| || || | | |-----| | |
------------ | | | ------------
| |-----|-----| | | | |
| original | | | | add-on |
| box | | | | box |
| | | | | |
| | |-|-------| | | |
| | |-|---------| | |
------------ ------------
I hope these drawings help illustrate my options.
Does anyone have any other ideas or suggestions?
Rodney
|
290.538 | I'd make it a subpanel... | TEKVAX::KOPEC | we're gonna need another Timmy! | Tue May 23 1995 09:38 | 14 |
| I'd definitely feed it from a breaker in the first box; if you feed it
from the mains you will be increasing your service capacity, and that
means you have to get the electric company involved.. (I have a
nagging feeling that there is a code violation lurking in doing it from
the mains too, but I can't put my finger on it..)
If you feed it from a breaker in the first box, you need FOUR (not
three) conductors to connect the two; the only place ground (bare) and
neutral (white) are allowed to connect is at a single point (which, in
this case, is in the main breaker box); the add-on box will need two
"ground" bus bars, one for the white wires (isolated from the box) and
one for the bare wires (bonded to the box).
...tom
|
290.539 | can you get a bigger main panel? | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | Stunt babies on closed course. | Tue May 23 1995 09:58 | 15 |
| Replace the original box with a 200A panel that has more slots. Older (5+
years ago) I think they started coming out with larger 200A panels for just the
reason you state (many 240V breakers).
I think the problem with option 1 is that I think the code requires that
residential housing have a single point of disconnect after the meter. Tying
in the second on the "live" side of the "original box"'s breaker does not allow
for that. (I think that is what .1 could not put their finger on in terms of a
code violation.)
So if you can't get a bigger main panel, go with a sub - fed off of the main
and follow what .1 says in terms of 4 wires and seperate ground/neutrals in the
second box.
bjm
|
290.540 | | HELIX::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome MRO1-1/KL31 Pole HJ33 | Tue May 23 1995 12:44 | 11 |
| You can do a subpanel. I don't think the 2nd main panel would pass
inspection. As .1 says, the inspector will probably insist on a
single disconnect.
I think that possibly on a setup like that, where the subpanel is
right next to the main panel, you don't need to isolate the ground
from neutral, but I'd want to check to be sure.
But I think .2 has the best idea; take everything out and put in
a 200 amp panel. It probably won't cost all that much more if
you get one that lets you reuse the breakers you have, and it will
be a lot neater.
|
290.541 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Tue May 23 1995 15:39 | 6 |
| add some piggy back breakers.
better yet convert to fossil fuel heat and you'll have room to
waste.
ed
|
290.542 | | TEKVAX::KOPEC | we're gonna need another Timmy! | Tue May 23 1995 16:31 | 11 |
| I didn't want to suggest installing a larger panel because that can be
a pain in the neck.. lotsa wires flailing around while the power to the
house is shut off.. but it's certainly a good solution if you want to
do the work. (you need to make sure you get a new panel that will take
the old breakers, or you'll leave a LOT of money at the circuit-breaker
store..)
Even when the subpanel is right next to the main panel, the neutral
busbar has to be isolated..
...tom
|
290.543 | Advise on adding breaker box! | TACHI::NEZBALLA | | Tue May 23 1995 19:00 | 4 |
| I don't know if they still exist but when I lived in Maryland, I had a similar
problem. I was able to buy breakers half the thickness of the original breakers
thus doubling the capacity of the breaker box. These breakers were rated the
same as the original ones. This may help.
|
290.544 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Tue May 23 1995 21:41 | 10 |
| Re: .6
The only problem with 1/2 height breakers is that to meet code
the box itself has to be rated for the number of circuits.
That's why you see for example breaker boxes saying: "10 position
10 circuit" vs. "10 position 20 circuit" .....
What the difference is I don't know. Maybe the metal in the bus
bar is different to handle the extra amps?
|
290.545 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Wed May 24 1995 12:16 | 8 |
| I don't think it's "extra amps" because the max draw won't be any
higher anyway. I think it's just a size thing. Only so much space
therefore, only so much room for some number of wires. Depending
on the numbers involved, I'd consider some of those breakers that are
really two breakers with two switches for two circuits. Again, that
would mean another set of wires for each, but there should be room.
ed
|
290.546 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Wed May 24 1995 14:04 | 21 |
| > I don't think it's "extra amps" because the max draw won't be any
> higher anyway.
I don't know about this. Seems to me that if one put double
the number of circuits in the box for what it's rated that the
"average" continious draw (vs. max) would be higher.
> I think it's just a size thing.
That's what she said :-) :-)
> Only so much space therefore, only so much room for some number of wires.
Well that sounds logical. However when I was looking at boxes
at Home Depot in Jan. the sales person told me one should keep
the cardboard box the breaker box came in for any breaker box
rated for more circuits than positions, saying that if you were
to be inspected that their is no way to visibly tell the difference.
Of course HD "experts" are not 100% reliable.
Any "experts" out that that can comment on this?
|
290.547 | 40 + 2 = more room | BINKLY::CLAY | Second Place Is Just The First Looser | Wed May 24 1995 17:02 | 10 |
| According to the NEC you allowed to add two "piggyback" breakers to any
pannel, This means a forty circuit panel can accomodate 42 circuits.
also The easiest/chepest way our would be adding a sub panel. Since the
exsisting panel is Square D (high quality) I would add the same, then
you only need to worry about purchaseing one type of breaker. Also as
said before the neutral must be isolated from the ground in a "sub"
panel.
Don
Lic Elec.
|
290.548 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Wed May 24 1995 21:09 | 6 |
| > According to the NEC you allowed to add two "piggyback" breakers to any
> pannel, This means a forty circuit panel can accomodate 42 circuits.
That of course assumes it's a 40 position 40 circuit rated panel :-)
(ie. if it's a 20 position 40 circuit panel you wouldn't be physically
able to get 42 circuits ....)
|
290.549 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Thu May 25 1995 10:10 | 5 |
| "2 additional allowed"
hey, thanks for the info.
ed
|
290.550 | right.. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | we're gonna need another Timmy! | Thu May 25 1995 14:28 | 6 |
| The "keep the cardboard box" comment is pretty interesting..
Somehow, I don't think an inspector is gonna care about ANYTHING except
what's printed on the label attached to the breaker panel..
...tom
|
290.551 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Thu May 25 1995 14:51 | 10 |
| > The "keep the cardboard box" comment is pretty interesting..
Hey, I only reported what I was told :-)
> Somehow, I don't think an inspector is gonna care about ANYTHING except
> what's printed on the label attached to the breaker panel..
I just checked one of my panels and I couldn't find it on mine.
Of course it's written in a cryptic language so it's probably
there and I just can't read it :-)
|
290.552 | it should be in there.. if it's allowed.. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | we're gonna need another Timmy! | Thu May 25 1995 15:10 | 9 |
| My Murray subpanel says nothing about dual breakers, so I'd assume they
can't be used in that box (with the possible exception of the 2-ckt
rule, but I'm not confortable with that..)
My Crouse-hinds main panel has a picture in it showing which positions
are allowed to have dual breakers (it's a 32-position, 40-circuit
panel).
...tom
|
290.553 | One more question! | CSC32::R_IVERS | | Mon May 29 1995 16:19 | 12 |
|
OK, I think the consensus is to set it up as a sub-panel. I agree that
this is better since it does give me a single dis-connect point. I have
started this work but I do have one other question.
I plan to feed the new box with a 100 Amp breaker in the original box.
What is the minimum size wire that I should use to feed the new box. I
was thinking somewhere in the range of #2 THNN but that is very
difficult to connect into the 100 Amp breaker connections.
Rodney (original note)
|
290.554 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Mon May 29 1995 21:13 | 20 |
| > My Crouse-hinds main panel has a picture in it showing which positions
> are allowed to have dual breakers (it's a 32-position, 40-circuit
> panel).
Well I re-checked my box that was in question (it's also a
Crouse-Hinds, which BTW, I believe has since been bought out
by GE?) and looked at the picture. Now that I know what
I'm looking at it is indeed there. It shows my box is rated
for 8 position and 16 circuits (12 if main breakered since
main breaker takes 2 full positions).
This is great news, thanks! I already was using 4 dual circuit
breakers in this box and thought I may be violating code.
BTW, I'm still curious how two same sized and same number of
positions boxes can have different max circuits ratings. What
makes them different?
ps: this reinforces my practice of taking anything Home Depot says with
at least a few grains of salt :-)
|
290.555 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon May 29 1995 22:41 | 3 |
| Crouse-Hinds was bought out by Murray/Siemens.
Steve
|
290.556 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Tue May 30 1995 13:09 | 4 |
| > Crouse-Hinds was bought out by Murray/Siemens.
Guess which store told me GE bought them :-)
But please do *not* tell me the breakers are not compatible ....
|
290.557 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue May 30 1995 14:27 | 11 |
| They should be. Both GE and Crouse-Hinds are in the "Interchangeable"
group. I suspect they all come off the same factory lines in Mexico and
Malaysia.
I recently wanted to find a Crouse-Hinds 50A GFI breaker - one store sold
Siemens and said that I needed to find a Crouse-Hinds. They directed me to
another store which did have Crouse-Hinds labelled breakers, but the 50A was
labelled Murray instead. It looked just like the Siemens breaker from the
other store. Fine print revealed that Murray was a division of Siemens.
Steve
|
290.558 | underground utilities (electric, phone, cable) | UPSAR::WALLACE | Vince Wallace | Thu Sep 14 1995 16:33 | 14 |
| This subject matter has been discussed under other topics (like
1037 and 5313), but I thought it really deserved it's own topic.
I'm in the process of building a house and would be interested in
other people's opinions about getting their "wire" oriented services
underground, as opposed to using telephone poles.
How do the installation costs compare? Can you get cable tv wire
that can be run underground? Can you run electric, phone, and
cable all in the same trench?
Thanks,
Vince
|
290.559 | I would imagine yes | ROCK::MUELLER | | Thu Sep 14 1995 16:52 | 10 |
| My parents had a house built 15 years ago in NY and everything is underground.
I don't know if it's all in the same trench or not. I know the cable is
separate ... it was installed later on ... but still underground. The whole
neighborhood was designed this way.
I think the only difference in the cable is that it's a bit thicker ... perhaps
thicker wire and sheilding for lower resistance, and better insulation to stand
up the outdoor/underground abrasives and such.
-Rob
|
290.560 | done all the time | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Thu Sep 14 1995 18:21 | 19 |
| >> How do the installation costs compare?
It was included in the price of the house (built in Merrimack NH 6 years ago).
>> Can you get cable tv wire
>> that can be run underground? Can you run electric, phone, and
>> cable all in the same trench?
Sure can. Direct Bury stuff. Thicker and some have internal "sealant" that
will seal small cuts. Some also have extra shelding - make sure you run more
than 1 pair on the phone line. I think mine is a 6 or 8 pair. Only one cable
line run though.
Its usually burried in the same trench. Personally I would have run 1 or 1.5"
PVC so if something went wrong I could pull new (or more) lines thorugh.
bjm
|
290.561 | | CADSYS::RITCHIE | Elaine Kokernak Ritchie, 225-4199 | Thu Sep 14 1995 19:30 | 10 |
| The materials cost you more for buried cable, either using conduit or direct
bury, as mentioned. You also have to have a place for a meter, if your
neighborhood is not set up for underground services. Be sure you or your
electrician leaves extra pull-strings in the conduit for future snaking
operations.
It's nice because the birds don't have a place to nest over your lawn, picnic
area or driveway!
Elaine
|
290.562 | Underground Utilities | CNTROL::STLAURENT | | Fri Sep 15 1995 16:21 | 20 |
| You need to consider trenching costs and back fill material and/or
conduit. Each area is different. When I built in central MA, the phone
company was in charge of the pole installation for my town. They split
the responsibility with the electric company. They would provide apt
300' of wire and one pole on your property. Each additional pole was
$1500.
I built a little beyond 300' and had they install a pole half half way
and the went underground from there. It was a 2' deep trench power on
one side in 1-1/2 PVC phone and cable on the other side sharing 3/4"
PVC. I got the needed phone and catv wires free for the asking for the
companies providing the service to the area.
The power cable is costly. I was lucky enough to attend an electrical
supply house auction and buy it below wholesale.
Check your local electric company and talk to the field engineer
assigned to your area and find out about the local requirements.
/Jim
|
290.563 | | HPS126::WILSON | | Mon Sep 18 1995 13:15 | 13 |
| There can be some negotiation over who pays for what...
When I built my house 20 years ago the situation was that Boston Edison
would pay for the pole and the wire if it was an overhead service,
however if I wanted an underground service, I had to pay for the wire,
the trenching, and the pole on my property if I did not want to pay for
the trenching to the nearest pole in front of my neighbors property.
So I said to the nice man at Boston Edison, "Which way do you want to
do this? Do you want to just put in the pole on your nickel, and I
will pay for the trenching and cable, or do you want to put in the pole
and overhead service on your nickel, and then remove the overhead
service when I replace it with underground cable?" He said, "You win."
|
290.330 | always used his...never owned my own | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Fri Sep 22 1995 14:04 | 6 |
| OK - who's got their NEC book around - a 125A subpanel requires what guage
wire? CU and AL (but I think I'll be using CU).
I get lost over 60A.
bjm
|
290.121 | how does one "extend" the cables for the new panel? | HANNAH::SCHULLMAN | Dan Schullman | Sat Sep 30 1995 03:00 | 13 |
| When upgrading a panel from 100A to 200A, how does one handle an original
cable that isn't long enough to reach to the new location?
The 200A boxes tend to be bigger than the 100A ones, plus my existing
panel has some tandem breakers in it (making it a bit more "compact").
It certainly seems possible to me that in the new panel (which will go
where the old one is/was) some cables may not reach their new breakers
without some "help".
Is it kosher to splice (e.g., with wire nuts) cables inside the panel,
to provide the few extra inches that are apt to be necessary?
--Dan S.
|
290.122 | | DSSDEV::RICE | | Sat Sep 30 1995 17:36 | 1 |
| Thats fine.
|
290.124 | Stepping Up... | BIRDIE::ORLOWSKI | | Mon Oct 02 1995 10:01 | 14 |
|
I've done several with my dad. We generally would set up the new panel
adjacent to the old panel if the space is available, and if not the old
panel had to be pulled forward and the new panel would go under or in
the same place the old panel was. So as not to disturb the residence
both panels would be turned on and only 1 circuit at a time would be
transfered from the old panel to the new panel.
The wires had to be spliced in many cases in a hex box.
By using another wall to mount the new panel and another space for the
outside meters, you can set up the whole new service including the drop
without disturbing the existing service.
-Steve
|
290.509 | "SWD" anyone? | NETCAD::COLELLA | | Mon Oct 30 1995 15:55 | 10 |
| I have a Cutler-Hammer (or a name close to that) subpanel. I
went to get a new circuit breaker for an empty slot, but found that
the replacement breakers at Somerville Lumber had the letters "SWD"
under the "20" or "15" on the switch. The 30As didn't have SWD.
The breakers at home don't have SWD. So, what does SWD mean?
thx,
Barry
|
290.510 | can be used as s switch | BITZEE::CLAY | Indecision may or may not be my problem | Tue Oct 31 1995 14:11 | 2 |
| The circuit breaker marked "SWD" is rated to be used as a switch
device along with provideing overcurrent protection.
|
290.511 | we aren't all breakers "switch devices"? | HANNAH::SCHULLMAN | Dan Schullman | Thu Nov 02 1995 12:24 | 8 |
| RE: .40
Can't all breakers be used as "switches"? Certainly any I've ever
encountered, INCLUDING the mains, allowed me to manually disable the
flow of electrons! What am I missing? Is it perhaps the number of
on/off cycles that the breaker is rated for?
--Dan S.
|
290.512 | | TEKVAX::KOPEC | we're gonna need another Timmy! | Thu Nov 02 1995 14:49 | 3 |
| I *think* the number of cycles under load..
...tom
|
290.849 | Any recent service upgrades? | DELNI::KEVIN | | Mon Feb 12 1996 12:51 | 10 |
| I'm just received an estimate on upgrading my electrical service from
60 amps to 200 amps. I'm supplying the panel and breakers and the
electrician is supplying the conduit, cable and meter socket. The
estimate is for $925 and I'm wondering if that's a good, bad or average
price for a service upgrade. Has anyone had their service upgraded
recently? (This is in the greater Boston area).
Thanks,
Kevin
|
290.850 | depends on what you call reasonable | DYPSS1::SCHAFER | Character matters. | Mon Feb 12 1996 13:44 | 5 |
| I just recently did this for a friend. 4/0 SEU was in the $3-5/ft
range, ground wire was cheaper. The meter base was provided by the
power company at no charge.
I'd guess that $925 is 99% labor.
|
290.851 | Sounds high, considering... | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Feb 12 1996 14:23 | 6 |
| Considering you're supplying the panel and breakers, it sounds a
bit high. I'd ask for a price breakdown and his hourly rate. This is
about a days work. Assuming $125 for wire, this comes out to about
$100/hr. for an 8 hr. day.
Ray
|
290.852 | | UPSAR::WALLACE | Vince Wallace | Mon Feb 12 1996 15:31 | 4 |
| I'm paying a bit under $1000 for a new 200 amp installation (includes
panel but no breakers). This is for about 100' underground from the
pole to the house. -- Vince
|
290.853 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Feb 12 1996 15:56 | 4 |
| It cost me $800 in Nashua, NH, about 5 years ago with the electrician
supplying everything.
Steve
|
290.854 | | SMURF::MSCANLON | a ferret on the barco-lounger | Mon Feb 12 1996 16:17 | 6 |
| I was given an estimate of $800 to go from 100 to 200 AMP
service in Merrimack, NH with the electrician supplying
everything. This was about 3 years ago.
Mary-Michael
|
290.855 | Is 200 amp more energy efficient? | USCTR1::ESULLIVAN | | Fri Feb 16 1996 16:16 | 6 |
|
Would upgrading electrical service from 100 amp to 200 amp result in
a lower electric bill (assuming usage is the same under either service)
because a 200 amp service would be more efficient?
ems
|
290.856 | | EVMS::MORONEY | Never underestimate the power of human stupidity | Fri Feb 16 1996 16:37 | 4 |
| No, other than a very small effect from smaller resistance losses in the
feeder due to the larger conductors.
-Mike
|
290.862 | Cost of 100 -> 200 AMP Service Upgrade | SPEZKO::SWIST | | Mon Mar 25 1996 18:30 | 18 |
| ***** Service Upgrade *****
Wondering if anyone here can give me a ball-park figure for the overall cost of
upgrading from 100 - 200 AMP service.
Any recommendations on local (Nashua) electricians who would do this job?
Also, what is normally included in this type of upgrade?
Any info would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks,
Scott
|
290.863 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Mar 26 1996 00:49 | 6 |
| It cost me $800 five years ago. Included breaker box and breakers,
meter box (power company supplies meter), entrance cable and labor.
I would not recommend the electrician I used for the job.
Steve
|
290.864 | "What's this switch for?" | PCBUOA::TARDIFF | Dave Tardiff | Thu Mar 28 1996 13:55 | 18 |
|
It cost me about $700 about 8 years ago. I re-used the
existing breakers in a new 40-something slot box, and added a
separate box for the new 200 amp main breaker. This is for ease
of kill-all-power operations (slightly more visible than inside the
big box...) but mostly for my peace of mind when I'm adding new breakers
and wires in the big box - I KNOW everthing in there is dead. Of course,
I always test it first anyways....
Your cost may vary depending on breakers. If you've gotta buy
new ones (converting from fuses or an older, hard-to-find or incompatible
with the new box brand) you'll have to pay a bit more. Contrary to
a popular scam, breakers don't often go bad or wear out, unless you've
been using one as a daily switch. Go for the common and reliable
Square-D stuff.
I don't remember the electrician I used...
|
290.865 | a note on Square-D | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Thu Mar 28 1996 13:59 | 13 |
| >>been using one as a daily switch.
I think they have breakers rated that can be used as 'switches'.
>>Go for the common and reliable Square-D stuff.
Or GE.
Square-D, 8 years ago, didn't have the 'homeowners' line they have now. The
commercial brand of square did is top of the line, the home owners brand does
not have that reputation (yet?).
bjm
|
290.866 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Mar 28 1996 15:48 | 6 |
| Another note - if you have Federal-Pacific breakers, get rid of them (and the
box) ASAP. They're a fire and shock hazard (don't go off when tripped,
breakers fall off of the busbar, and worse.) UL has de-listed FP panels
(FP is out of business).
Steve
|
290.867 | return/ground bus bar full | NOODLE::DEMERS | | Thu Mar 28 1996 16:14 | 14 |
| Just took a look at my breaker box. Nicely laid out, wires dressed nicely, 8
out of 40 available for future expansion. So far, so good.
The two return/ground bus bars that run on each side of the breakers are full.
The electrician used two slots per line (return and ground) and in only one
instance did I see two wires in one slot.
What's the correct procedure when more circuits are added? Can a slot
acccomodate more than one wire (legally, physically it seems to be large
enough)? Is that dependent on gauge?
tnx
Chris
|
290.868 | | 2082::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Mar 28 1996 18:51 | 4 |
| I don't think there's a problem with more than one wire per slot in the
ground bar, as long as there's a good connection.
Steve
|
290.869 | Thanks for the Info!!! | SPEZKO::SWIST | | Thu Mar 28 1996 20:02 | 13 |
| Thanks for all the advice!
I've got a Sylvania panel at present with breakers, but I've heard that
the breakers are not easy to find - so I guess I'll go to more popular
vendors.
I was hoping to keep the present breakers and reuse but I guess there
won't be much chance of that.
Thanks Again,
Scott
|
290.870 | | 2082::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Mar 28 1996 23:39 | 4 |
| Sylvania is GTE - and those are the "interchangeable group" -
easy to find.
Steve
|
290.871 | Thanks! | SPEZKO::SWIST | | Sun Mar 31 1996 22:37 | 6 |
| Thanks Steve!
Appreciate the info!
Scott
|
290.872 | i like ITE, too | DYPSS1::SCHAFER | Character matters. | Tue Apr 02 1996 17:48 | 2 |
| in this area, SquareD is very expensive. i've used ITE panels and
breakers with very good results. also, IMO, SD "home" stuff is junk.
|
290.873 | Help! Adding Circuits | NETCAD::MCGRATH | | Thu Sep 12 1996 19:44 | 44 |
290.874 | | SKYLAB::FISHER | Gravity: Not just a good idea. It's the law! | Thu Sep 12 1996 20:23 | 10 |
290.875 | | STAR::DZIEDZIC | Tony Dziedzic - DTN 381-2438 | Fri Sep 13 1996 01:52 | 36 |
290.876 | extra circuits in addition | CPEEDY::BRADLEY | Chuck Bradley | Fri Sep 27 1996 18:18 | 36 |
290.877 | | SKYLAB::FISHER | Gravity: Not just a good idea. It's the law! | Fri Sep 27 1996 19:10 | 13 |
290.878 | be nice to future owners... | PCBUOA::TARDIFF | Dave Tardiff | Fri Sep 27 1996 20:25 | 21 |
290.879 | don't forget how many breaker slots the main has | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Mon Sep 30 1996 11:13 | 15 |
290.880 | | UPSAR::WALLACE | Vince Wallace | Mon Sep 30 1996 16:03 | 10 |
290.881 | | ASIC::RANDOLPH | Tom R. N1OOQ | Thu Jan 09 1997 16:05 | 6 |
290.882 | underground | USCTR1::RIDGE | Steve Ridge @297-6529 | Thu Jan 09 1997 16:22 | 2 |
290.883 | Insert lawyer joke here | SKYLAB::FISHER | Gravity: Not just a good idea. It's the law! | Thu Jan 09 1997 19:30 | 6 |
290.884 | | ASIC::RANDOLPH | Tom R. N1OOQ | Fri Jan 10 1997 11:13 | 9 |
290.885 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri Jan 10 1997 11:53 | 22 |
290.886 | another thing to think about for underground | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Fri Jan 10 1997 12:39 | 8 |
290.887 | I like poles... | PERFOM::MATTHES | | Fri Jan 10 1997 14:49 | 13 |
290.888 | | EVMS::MORONEY | SYS$BOOM_BAH | Fri Jan 10 1997 15:07 | 10 |
290.889 | | ASIC::RANDOLPH | Tom R. N1OOQ | Fri Jan 10 1997 18:20 | 9 |
290.890 | | UPSAR::WALLACE | Digital: A Dilbertian Company | Sat Jan 11 1997 12:52 | 13 |
290.891 | correct !! | QUAKKS::DWORSACK | | Mon Jan 13 1997 15:07 | 4 |
290.892 | Breaker panel in the garage. | ASABET::SOTTILE | Get on Your Bikes and Ride | Mon Jan 13 1997 19:24 | 6 |
290.893 | | MKOTS3::WTHOMAS | | Mon Jan 13 1997 19:46 | 5 |
290.894 | not uncommon | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Mon Jan 13 1997 20:54 | 4 |
290.895 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Mon Jan 13 1997 21:09 | 8 |
290.896 | | HYLNDR::BROWN | | Mon Jan 13 1997 23:56 | 28 |
290.897 | Define... | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Tue Jan 14 1997 09:42 | 8 |
290.898 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Tue Jan 14 1997 11:41 | 14 |
290.899 | if they own up to the meter | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Tue Jan 14 1997 14:06 | 7 |
290.900 | | SKYLAB::FISHER | Gravity: Not just a good idea. It's the law! | Tue Jan 14 1997 15:23 | 9 |
290.901 | | NUBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Tue Jan 14 1997 15:38 | 9 |
290.902 | not me | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Tue Jan 14 1997 17:17 | 6 |
290.903 | | SKYLAB::FISHER | Gravity: Not just a good idea. It's the law! | Tue Jan 14 1997 17:57 | 9 |
290.904 | | HYLNDR::BROWN | | Wed Jan 15 1997 16:08 | 17 |
290.905 | | HELIX::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome SHR3-1/C22 Pole A22 | Wed Jan 15 1997 19:43 | 4 |
290.906 | thread(2) | DYPSS1::SCHAFER | | Thu Jan 16 1997 23:00 | 15 |
290.907 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Fri Jan 17 1997 13:52 | 7 |
290.908 | | EVMS::MORONEY | SYS$BOOM_BAH | Fri Jan 17 1997 15:17 | 8 |
290.909 | box in the garage | SSDEVO::HAMPTON | Phil Hampton, FIB Software Eng | Fri Jan 17 1997 19:29 | 6
|