Mr. Serious
Senior Member
- Location
- Oklahoma, USA
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
I would like some advice on how to proceed here.
Customer called, converting gas range to electric. I went out to take a look. 100A service, and he has a new 13.5 kW electric range. I told him I would do a load calculation and see if the existing service would support an electric range.
gas heat, gas water heater, electric dryer, air conditioning (18.1 amps MCA on the outdoor unit)
I get about 110 amps of load using the standard load calculation. I'm assuming a dishwasher, disposal, and range hood are the only built-in appliances.
I had a job like this before, where the customer wanted to add a hot tub and it put his service at 103 or 104 amps of load, and I refused to do that job, but that time, there were other things wrong also, and overall it didn't seem to be one that I could do without spending more money than the customer probably wanted.
In this case, the job itself looks simple enough, the existing electrical system is old, but it hasn't been messed with and is in good condition. But I'm still leery of adding load to make the total load calculation come to 110 amps on a 100 amp service. Perhaps the alternative method of calculating load would allow it? I don't know much about that one.
Customer called, converting gas range to electric. I went out to take a look. 100A service, and he has a new 13.5 kW electric range. I told him I would do a load calculation and see if the existing service would support an electric range.
gas heat, gas water heater, electric dryer, air conditioning (18.1 amps MCA on the outdoor unit)
I get about 110 amps of load using the standard load calculation. I'm assuming a dishwasher, disposal, and range hood are the only built-in appliances.
I had a job like this before, where the customer wanted to add a hot tub and it put his service at 103 or 104 amps of load, and I refused to do that job, but that time, there were other things wrong also, and overall it didn't seem to be one that I could do without spending more money than the customer probably wanted.
In this case, the job itself looks simple enough, the existing electrical system is old, but it hasn't been messed with and is in good condition. But I'm still leery of adding load to make the total load calculation come to 110 amps on a 100 amp service. Perhaps the alternative method of calculating load would allow it? I don't know much about that one.
