Amplitude Electrical
Member
- Location
- California, United States of America
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
I have a question regarding a panel upgrade request that I had from a client. The method I propose is my own, not his.
Client owns a piece of commercial property being used as a store. Building is 50+ years old, and insurance company has requested that he replace the Zinsco panel that is currently in operation. The current panel is rated for 200 amps and 20 circuits. No conduits are exposed; all conduit runs are concealed within wall (plaster & lath). The existing panel physical dimensions are 81cm X 51cm X 14cm (32" X 20" X 6"). The replacement panel measures only 26" x 14" x 4"
My Idea, to avoid removing any sections of plastering or wall sections, is to remove all of the internal components ("guts") of the existing panel, and "nest" the new panel inside of the old enclosure, because it is significantly smaller. I would thereby create a "gutter" around the new panel and not have to remove any wall sections.
I would support the new panel enclosure with steel stud sections or brackets rated for the weight of the panel. I would fabricate a new dead front with a cutout hole the size of the new panel enclosure, and secure the panel dead front to that. To connect the existing conductors I would install plastic bushings into the new panel KOs to feed all of the wires into the new enclosure.
I haven't asked the building department to upgrade in this method yet, but I just wanted to ask here first: can anyone think of any blatant code violations such an installation would have?
Client owns a piece of commercial property being used as a store. Building is 50+ years old, and insurance company has requested that he replace the Zinsco panel that is currently in operation. The current panel is rated for 200 amps and 20 circuits. No conduits are exposed; all conduit runs are concealed within wall (plaster & lath). The existing panel physical dimensions are 81cm X 51cm X 14cm (32" X 20" X 6"). The replacement panel measures only 26" x 14" x 4"
My Idea, to avoid removing any sections of plastering or wall sections, is to remove all of the internal components ("guts") of the existing panel, and "nest" the new panel inside of the old enclosure, because it is significantly smaller. I would thereby create a "gutter" around the new panel and not have to remove any wall sections.
I would support the new panel enclosure with steel stud sections or brackets rated for the weight of the panel. I would fabricate a new dead front with a cutout hole the size of the new panel enclosure, and secure the panel dead front to that. To connect the existing conductors I would install plastic bushings into the new panel KOs to feed all of the wires into the new enclosure.
I haven't asked the building department to upgrade in this method yet, but I just wanted to ask here first: can anyone think of any blatant code violations such an installation would have?