brycenesbitt
Senior Member
- Location
- United States
How does your area handle panel upgrades or replacements, in the vicinity of existing gas meters?
I've got four buildings in one complex that all look basically like this:

And yes, that's a 4" sewer line, surface mounted so to speak.
In mine area the utility won't allow these subpanels to be replaced in place, nor allow a gutter to stub into the wall wires.
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Background:
The existing breakers are per unit 15 and 20A stab-lock. Units are 1500 square feet each.
14 units plus laundry. Total upstream breaker size 100A stab-lok. Calculated demand 180A per NEC 220.82 for the group of 14.
No reported problems with the electrical, and no history of main breaker trips. No tenant complaints.
But insurance does not like it. And it's never clear if an FPE breaker will trip when needed.
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What would you be allowed to do in your jurisdiction? For those of you in PG&E service territory, what would you do here
other than run away and wash your eyes out carefully?
I've got four buildings in one complex that all look basically like this:

And yes, that's a 4" sewer line, surface mounted so to speak.
In mine area the utility won't allow these subpanels to be replaced in place, nor allow a gutter to stub into the wall wires.
---
Background:
The existing breakers are per unit 15 and 20A stab-lock. Units are 1500 square feet each.
14 units plus laundry. Total upstream breaker size 100A stab-lok. Calculated demand 180A per NEC 220.82 for the group of 14.
No reported problems with the electrical, and no history of main breaker trips. No tenant complaints.
But insurance does not like it. And it's never clear if an FPE breaker will trip when needed.
-----
What would you be allowed to do in your jurisdiction? For those of you in PG&E service territory, what would you do here
other than run away and wash your eyes out carefully?