Pengy
Member
- Location
- California, United States
Homeowners of a remodeling project that I have taken on had contacted me about installing some carbon film radiant heating in their house with a floating engineered hardwood floor to provide warmth to their feet around the house. The total square footage of the heated areas would be about 1500 sq.ft and a quote from an installer said that the heating elements use 20w/sq.ft @ 240V which puts me at about 125A of max usage. I know the NEC considers this as constant usage as they are hard-wired and not plugged in, and in order to provide zoning to the different rooms/floors, 10 2-Pole 20A breakers would be preferred with a single 12/2 romex running to each thermostat (10 zones/thermostats). Doing this would require a new subpanel as the main panel has only 4 slots available (GE 200A main panel ~20 slots w/ 4-pole main breaker).
Would a load like this be feasible in this house without requesting another 200A service feed? The heaters would never be used at the same time, however the house does currently have a 50A pool circuit, 40A for AC #1, 30A for the dryer, and a 100A subpanel with 50A for an oven, and 40A for AC #2 and then lighting/plugs for a 3400 sq.ft home.
The installer is also able to wire the heating film in series to halve the amperage, but would take longer to heat up.
Would a load like this be feasible in this house without requesting another 200A service feed? The heaters would never be used at the same time, however the house does currently have a 50A pool circuit, 40A for AC #1, 30A for the dryer, and a 100A subpanel with 50A for an oven, and 40A for AC #2 and then lighting/plugs for a 3400 sq.ft home.
The installer is also able to wire the heating film in series to halve the amperage, but would take longer to heat up.