bibbles
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- Jan 7, 2014
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That's not how my breaker box is set up, nor how I was planning to wire things; allow me to expand!hiboy gave me permission to help you guys if he was busy. Sounds like you're gaining ground on figuring this out. Just a couple of thoughts..
After you get the 50 amp installed in your panel and run that to a new subpanel..you'll use a 30 amp double pole for your lights. That leaves room for either one 20amp double pole or 2 15amp 120v breakers. That will be up to your needs per appliance. There is no code for 30 amp 120v in a residential dwelling...it's either a 15 or 20 amp. I think the 20 amp double pole..being the better choice. Just make sure to be under your 80% usage rule..and if you use the 2 120volt breakers that they are in fact on different phases (i.e. stacked together...as it may be).
When I move old wiring around..especially in a panel, I try to disturb as little as possible, as old wiring has more risk of the sheath splitting or cracking. Best to not "jumble" around too much in there. Your panel should be balanced as is...Hiboy just wants to be sure that by moving everything up on the one side doesn't put it out of balance...as you know every other breaker on each side of your panel is at different phases...connected to different buses.
Hopefully the big guy will pop in to help confirm.
First, my box has phase A on the left, and phase B on the right (two horizontal "stacks"), with only two places for 240v breakers (in the middle, straddling both sides, top or bottom); two 120v breakers next to each other, vertically or horizontally, on either side will be on the same phase... sort of like this: [:::|:::]
Second, I wasn't going to bother with a sub panel, and my breakers are "Stab-Lok"; there is definitely a 30amp 120v breaker (it's in front of me right now), which I might use along side a 30amp 240v breaker (also in front of me) as I have three single width spots left, and those would run to their respective outlets/controllers; alternatively, I would be running a 50amp 240v breaker (also in front of me) into the room, using phase A plus the neutral for some 120v outlets (AC1+fans), phase B plus the neutral for some other 120v outlets (AC2+fans), with both phases and the neutral terminating in, say, a Titan Controls Helios 3, or a simple, heavy-duty timer, then 240v outlets.
Assuming I'm correct about the later (single 50amp circuit), I'll have a 20amp load across both phase A and B from the lights, an additional 12amps (32amps total) on phase A from AC1, an additional 12amps (32amps total) on phase B from AC2, and an additional 4-6amps from fans divided between phase A and/or phase B, putting me at 36-38amps max on a given phase (just under 80% of 50amps).
The former (two 30amp circuits) is no problem at all from what I can see, but if I can eliminate the cost and effort of running two circuits I'll be dancing, and I mean like a chick on the bar after six shots of tequila, haha.
EDIT: I'm rounding everything up, FYI, just to be safe; I've already accounted for and balanced the rest of the place.
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