Residental mains wiring questions (USA)

I am installing a new meter & load panel. The old panel is 50 feet from the new location. I'm going to install a junction box at the old location and splice new wires to run in conduit to the new panel. The existing circuits are a mix of 120v 15A & 20A circuits, plus a 220v 20A (weird, I know), a total of 10 circuits.

Can I use a single neutral wire between these 2 boxes? How do I size it?

The mast for the service conductors must be threaded at the bottom end (where it mates with the meter box). How about the top end (where the weatherhead mounts to the mast)? Must it also be threaded, or can the weatherhead be a non-threaded type?

This is in N. California.

Thanks.

Reply to
Bob E.
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You will need to add up the ampacities of the single pole breakers on each leg of the service that will feed circuits that are in the old panel. You then size the combined neutral for the higher of the two amperage totals. This assures that the combined neutral will be able to carry the current that would result from the failure of one leg of the service which would raise the current being carried by the neutral to the total of all of the circuits on the intact leg. You then select the conduit that will have a cross sectional area at least 2.5 times the total of the cross sectional area of all of the conductors to be run in the conduit. If you are not using rigid metallic conduit that will be made up wrench tight between the old panel enclosure and the new one then it would be prudent to run a wire Equipment Grounding Conductor (EGC) sized for the largest circuit in the conduit with the other conductors. It is unwise, even though it is permissible, to depend on the continuity of other types of metallic raceway to serve as the EGC. If you use a non metallic raceway between the two cabinets a wire EGC is required.

As to the mast for the service entry conductors it need not be threaded at the top if a non threaded service head is used. In fact many inspectors would fail the installation if a non threaded service head were applied over cut threads.

-- Tom Horne

Reply to
Tom Horne

Thanks, Tom.

OK: size for the greater of the 2 phases used for those circuits. Since this depends how one runs those to the new panel, it's important how those are terminated. I was going to balance the loads, overall, but now I see how this impacts the neutral conductor size.

I can find all kinds of charts on-line that show me how many 10 or 12 or 14 ga conductors I can run in a 1-1/4 inch EMT, but not conductor cross-section. Do these exist? Or do I just convert the chart myself (ie, 25 conductors x 12 ga cross-section)?

EMT, so a grounding conductor is a must. By "the largest circuit in the conduit" you mean that if the biggest is 10 ga / 30 A, I should run a ground conductor sized for that one circuit?

Right! Thanks!

Reply to
Bob E.

No.

In accordance with your local codes. Not all jurisdictions use the same version of the NEC, and some have additional requirements.

Your local Authority Having Jurisdiction (building inspector) has the final say, but any local licensed electrical inspector should be able to answer your questions. I suggest you discuss the installation in advance with the inspector you plan to hire for the final inspection, and also that you consider leaving the old panel intact as a sub-panel with its main fed from a branch breaker in the new panel. It would help a lot if you get whichever code applies in your area and read it carefully before talking to the inspector, so you can ask reasonable questions or better yet have reasonable drawings for review. This is generally cheaper than doing the job twice.

If you don't have the required tools such as torque screwdrivers and wrenches and some training in electrical work, or a willingness to obtain both, then you will be a lot better off just hiring an electrician for this sort of job.

Reply to
Glen Walpert

--
http://www.powerstream.com/Wire_Size.htm

JF
Reply to
John Fields

Save yourself a world of headaches and don't use conduit. Instead just match the size and type of each cable there and run a matching romex cable over to the new location. Better yet, for any cable runs that are exposed, unstaple them and run them towards the new location to help keep the length of the run to a minimum. You will still need to put the splices in a j-box, but you're going to avoid the neutral issue, conduit bending and fitting, plus you won't have to figure and make allowances for derating of the conductors.

Reply to
Rich.

Can you keep the old panel where it is? If so, the easiest way to feed the stuff already in there is to leave everything alone. It's also cheaper.

If you start filling up a pipe with all the circuits you have, you'll be facing a problem with having to derate the ampacity of what you put in. That means bigger wires and pipe than you figured.

Feed the existing main breaker from the new panel. That way you only have to run three conductors and a ground. The breaker in the new panel feeding this supply will have to be sized no larger than what you already have.

*IF* the old panel has 100 amp. bussing but a 60 amp main breaker, you can change the breaker to a 100 and then feed with the appropriate sized wire and breaker. There is usually a label inside the panel with maximum amperage ratings on it.

IF the feed to this panel is underground, the following will not apply.

There is a non-metallic sheathed cable available for sixty or hundred amp. capacity. It looks like Loomex. or Romex or whatever is available where you live. (3 conductor and ground)

It resembles a fat range/dryer feed and has four wires in it, a red, black, white and ground. There is an 'NMD-9' or 'NMD-90' or some such rating on the jacket. It's a temperature rating. The NMD means 'Non Metallic Dry' (location).

Using that cable saves a lot of grief. It's infinitely easier than pipe and not limited to the 360 degrees maximum of allowed bends.

The Neutral in the old panel will most likely have to be disconnected from ground. Most jurisdictions require that the Neutral and Ground be bonded together *only* at the main service disconnect. Your new ground wire will obviously be picking up all the old existing ones.

There should be a brass bonding screw in the neutral bar that screws into the back of the case. Really ancient panels will have a wire jumper between the ground and neutral bar. Remove the brass screw or jumper to ground in the old panel. Leave it in the new one.

Is the old one a 100 amp panel? Around here, 3 AWG copper or 2 AWG Aluminium are the correct sizes and 1 1/4 inch conduit, should you decide not to use non metallic sheathed cable. Aluminium conductors need an antioxidant paste smeared on at the terminations, before assembly, like No-Alox or Penetrox or equivalent.

Most of the residential weatherheads I've used have two set screws to clamp to the side of the pipe, making threads unnecessary. See what's in use around you. Some utilities MAY want a threaded head. The hub side has to be threaded.

You have to watch the amount of pipe sticking through the roof. There is a limit to how high above the roof the attachment point of the overhead wire can be. They're worried about bending.

Here, IF the conduit doesn't go through the roof it can be the 'thin wall' conduit and not the rigid needed otherwise. There still has to be a threaded hub on the meter base. You use a weathertight connector on the thin wall pipe to connect. It's a grounding the pipe thing.

Here, we can even use PVC pipe IF it doesn't go through the roof. Plastic costs more than metal and is only used if the labour savings make sense.

Check around the neighbourhood and see what they are using. You may get lucky and find a good sales person at a local Home Hardware type store. Make sure what you buy meets LOCAL code before spending money.

All disclaimers apply. Your safety is YOUR concern. If you blow yourself up, burn down the neighbourhood or lose your hair, it's NOT my fault.

mike

Reply to
m II

Should he decide to go this route, I'd suggest keeping the old panel enclosure where it is and strip the breakers and bars out of it.

Leave all the old circuits right where they are and then match them, as per your instructions. This leaves lots of room for the splicing and has the benefit of having only the existing panel cover as an eyesore, instead of multiple junction boxes.

This all assumes the stuff is in the same building and that his new meter and panel aren't out on a pole next to the building. That would be a different thing.

mike

Reply to
m II

The old box probably won't pass inspection. It's an old Zinsco(sp?) box with the ratty breakers and the cover's missing. I plan to replace it with a proper J-box. The romex will terminate in the box without a problem, I think. These are all ungrounded circuits, but a separate ground wire will be run from each outlet over the roof (it's a flat roof that's being overhauled) to the new main panel. The ground conductor doesn't have to run along side the power conductors, does it?

10 existing circuits: 6x15A, 3x20A, 1x30A (220v). Can't I just oversize the conduit and extend the 14 ga (for 15A circuits), 12 ga (for 20A circuts), and 10 ga (for 30A circuits)? My understanding is that the issue was heating in the conduit and that if you oversize the conduit (EMT) that you will avoid approaching the heating limit. No?

Service feed is arial, from the pole to a mast on the roof.

There are no existing grounds, but nonetheless, I will separate the box ground and neutral in the old panel (now sub panel).

Thanks. I just wanted to know if an unthreaded could be used at the top. Looks straightforward.

The utility's reference manual (that they gladly hand out) states the max, min, and other parameters. Seems pretty clear and they provide a phone number for answers.

It has to go through the roof, so 2" threaded according to the utility (PG&E).

I'm a big boy. Just ask my GF. ;-) No worries, mate. Thanks.

Reply to
Bob E.

See if you can use Ground Fault Interrupters in the feeds to these circuits. Put an 1110 box or something similar on the new panel board and use a 'dead front' GFCI in it.They're cheaper than GFCI breakers. If allowed, it will save you having to run ground wires.

Then, feed the old circuit from there. I used to do that on rewires to ungrounded circuits. It saved trying to fish in ground wires. Your local code may be different. That wiring on the roof scares me. Any way to run the stuff under the floor? Crawl space, basement?

There are three things here. One, the temperature around the pipe. Two, the number of wires in the pipe and three, the allowed pipe fill percentage. Find a web page that has the Electrical Code Tables and look up table 310-15xxxx or somewhere around there.

Your derating *may* be as high as 50 percent, I'm guessing. So, a 15 amp wire, derated by 50 percent is now 15 / 0.5 = 30 amps. Then divide by the temperature derating percentage, if applicable. Your 14 AWG has become at least a 10 AWG.

Going up in pipe size does NOT allow you cut back on the wire size.

See where this going? Once you get all the wires sized, add up the total of the cross section areas. Divide that by the allowed pipe fill, probably 40 percent (0.4 division).

That gives you the MINIMUM allowed pipe size. If it doesn't equal a regular size, you have to go UP to the next one. If this adds up to a three or four inch pipe, you will have your hands full and wallet empty.

Perhaps consider a new sub panel with only a feed to it. The costs, even with ground fault breakers, would be less than the above stuff and take many hours less to do.

Good luck, regardless.

I think I know her sister...

Reply to
m II

Huh? Your outlet wires go over the roof? Uh, no you don't take seperate runs for the ground wire, all need to go together. You mention 'passing inspection'. That won't...

Yes, they do.

You can get and use conduit as large as you want.

Consider that the main breaker must be within a given distance of where the service entry wire comes into the building. A long run of SE to a 'remote' box will likely also raise some questions with the inspector.

I'd strongly recommend a session with the building inspector in your area, describe what you want to do, and ask him/her if that will pass. If they say "no", then look for other alternatives. If they say it is "OK", ask if they have any suggestions or things to watch for.

Their advice, without any doubt, will be worth more than all the advice you will ever get on the Internet.

Reply to
PeterD

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No. The NEC rule is one neutral per breaker.

Where to you find non-threaded weatherheads?

Reply to
JosephKK

a 15 amp wire (there is no such thing, you are referring to a 14 AWG wire), derated by 50% would be: 15 * 0.5, or 7.5 amps max. Not 30 amps!

Again, totally flawed math. The 14 AWG would be (roughly) the equal to

18 AWG. Not 10 AWG!
Reply to
PeterD

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That is just asking for multiple code violations.

Reply to
JosephKK

Um, it's completely legal and approved. Why are you suggesting it's not?

Reply to
Rich.

Zinsco is one of the wonders of the electrical industry.

You may be able to make a cover made for the old box if that would make the installation easier - a question for the inspector. That is what I would try to do if the enclosure is in good condition.

Existing ungrounded wiring can be grounded by adding a ground wire which does not have to be run with the power wires. It is in 250.130, which also details where the added ground wire is to be connected at a 'source'. I believe the ground wires does not necessarily have to connect through boxes on the way back to the grounding 'source' , but the connections probably have to remain accessible.

Over the roof? Doesn't sound like a good idea, but minimal information has been given. I might try running a #4 bare copper ground wire, which is relatively immune from abuse, or a ground wire in PVC. Could use one ground wire for all the receptacle boxes you are adding grounds to. Not obvious now the wires over the roof connect to the receptacle boxes.

Another thing to clear with the inspector.

For existing ungrounded circuits see 250.130.

I would split into multiple conduits so the derating is reasonable.

Note that if you are using #12 THHN wire, the table ampacity (310.16) is 30A. If derated to 70% the allowable ampacity is 21A. (The wire can not be used at over 20A.)

For #14 THHN the table ampacity is 25A. If derated to 70% the allowable ampacity is 17.5A (and can only be used at 15A).

If some of this is over the roof the wire would, I believe, be a wet rating and THHN would use the THWN rating that all that wire (that I have seen) also has. THWN wire has different table ampacities.

Derating is in 310.15.

If wiring is going above the roof you will likely have to derate it for the higher temperature it will be at.

I certainly agree. I see lots of questions.

-- bud--

Reply to
bud--

Nope, but the NEC may not allow a single neutral as proposed. Multiwire branch circuits (1 neutral for 2 or 3 hots) are allowed and have been widely used in the past.

Easy to find.

-- bud--

Reply to
bud--

I guess I should have been exact to the minutest extreme, but I don't feel the original poster was mislead.

If you have a wire that is allowed to carry a specific current and you have to keep feeding the same load, you don't derate the existing wire. You find the next size up, that, when derated, allows you to maintain the present load.

If your new wire is capable of 30 amperes, when derated because of pipe fill, will become a 15 amp capacity wire, hence my phrase "Your

14 AWG has become at least a 10 AWG." That means your new conductor in the pipe has to be a 10 guage. Then it connects to the existing 14 guage in the junction box.

A capacity of 15 ampere flow, when derated by 50 percent means that

15/.5 = a 30 amp needed capacity in the NEW wire before it is derated.

Again, we're NOT derating the existing wire. We are derating a HIGHER guage wire, in this case a 10 AWG, to give us the same ampacity that we had before stuffing these wires in a conduit.

You have to go with the existing current requirements divided by the derating factor, then use THAT current capacity to select your new wire size.

I'm sorry if I have said this in a confusing manner.

mike

Reply to
m II

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How about that there is not appropriate bus transfer? Nor is the occupancy and some other special applications properly addressed. There were big changes between the 2005 and the 2008 NEC for all classes of backup and alternative power systems.

Reply to
JosephKK

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Yes it does. 2005 NEC 250.24(C)(1) This [grounding] conductor shall be routed with the phase conductors...

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Give me each of the run lengths and i will calculate it up for you. Also, i will need to know how the conduit is mounted and against what material. I also will want to know what conductor insulation you are considering, i may ask you to change it.

apply.

Bonding the neutral at the service entrance is an NEC requirement. Bonding the rest of the neutrals is a separate and somewhat twitchy matter. I was party to a 3 hour meeting in the workplace trying to determine correct policy on this a month or two back.

You likely will have to install a grounding electrode. If you just follow NEC you certainly will.

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Don't be afraid to use that phone number. They would much rather that you get it right. It is definitely in their interest that you do.

Reply to
JosephKK

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