Stevenfyeager
Senior Member
- Location
- United States, Indiana
- Occupation
- electrical contractor
Strange: I have to replace a service because of excessive corrosion. On the utility pole is a 400 amp meter (extremely corroded) and two 200 amp disconnects feeding two panels in a house. One 200 amp disconnect feeds the original house, the other 200 amp feeds a two story room addition. So I bought 400 amp meter, disconnect combo, getting ready for the changeout day. But today, I noticed the wires coming out of the weatherhead at the top of the pole looked like only 4/0 Al.
one single set. Sure enough 4/0. Not 400 amp. I asked the POCO what size service is it? He came out and said 200 amp. I happily told the homeowner that we can save him some hundreds of $. I was going to return the meter combo and buy a 200 a combo, saving $400. I could send 100 amps to each 200 amp panel, and save some money in wires, labor, etc.But then, I asked about the inside panels. Each 200 amp panel inside has an elec furnace, and all electric.
Oh. shoot! I never install a 100 amp panel that is going to power an electric furnace with other house hold loads. Never. Furnaces or heat pumps seem to always need a 60amp breaker and a 30 amp breaker or more. 100 amp is too small I've always believed.
My question is: could this system be pulling more than 200 amps ? Do I need to replace with a 400 amp set up in case the system needs, say, 250 amps? (and bring the wires in the riser up to size?)
I have asked for the elec bill for the last 6 months. I've never hardly seen elec bills, I think they are in KW hours, and I wouldn't know how to interpret amps used. But maybe there is a way. (Googling it tells me divide the kwh by 720 hours, then divide by 240 v)
I don't feel comfortable replacing the two 200 amp outside disconnects with two 100 amp ones. I was all set to save the customer some money. Advice please ?
one single set. Sure enough 4/0. Not 400 amp. I asked the POCO what size service is it? He came out and said 200 amp. I happily told the homeowner that we can save him some hundreds of $. I was going to return the meter combo and buy a 200 a combo, saving $400. I could send 100 amps to each 200 amp panel, and save some money in wires, labor, etc.But then, I asked about the inside panels. Each 200 amp panel inside has an elec furnace, and all electric.
Oh. shoot! I never install a 100 amp panel that is going to power an electric furnace with other house hold loads. Never. Furnaces or heat pumps seem to always need a 60amp breaker and a 30 amp breaker or more. 100 amp is too small I've always believed.
My question is: could this system be pulling more than 200 amps ? Do I need to replace with a 400 amp set up in case the system needs, say, 250 amps? (and bring the wires in the riser up to size?)
I have asked for the elec bill for the last 6 months. I've never hardly seen elec bills, I think they are in KW hours, and I wouldn't know how to interpret amps used. But maybe there is a way. (Googling it tells me divide the kwh by 720 hours, then divide by 240 v)
I don't feel comfortable replacing the two 200 amp outside disconnects with two 100 amp ones. I was all set to save the customer some money. Advice please ?

