- Location
- Lockport, IL
- Occupation
- Semi-Retired Electrical Engineer
A private charitable organization to which I belong is considering adding lights to the parking area that serves the meeting hall. The hall is about 4000 square feet, and is about 30 years old. I volunteered to perform a service calculation, to see if the electrical system had the capacity to add the lights. I took off the panel covers (visual inspection only) to the two side-by-side panels located just inside from the meter?s location. Both panels have a 200 amp main breaker and 20 breaker positions. What I wanted to find out is which panel had the feed-through lugs that provided power to the other. The answer surprised me: neither!
It appears to me that the four wires (2 black, 1 white, and 1 bare copper) that enter the top of each panel come directly from the meter. I cannot verify that without tearing into the wall or opening the meter, and I am not qualified to do either task. Both panels have their neutral and ground busses bonded, and both have labels stating that they are ?service rated.? One panel has nothing but 2-pole breakers, and the other has a mix of 1-pole and 2-pole.
Is this a common installation? Is this a violation? Am I looking at two ?services? to the same building? What is the rating of the service (i.e., 200 amps or 400 amps)?
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Just as a side issue, I also discovered that a sub-panel located in a storeroom had neutral wires and EGCs tied to the same bus. I have already informed the hall manager that he needs to get an electrician out to fix that problem.
It appears to me that the four wires (2 black, 1 white, and 1 bare copper) that enter the top of each panel come directly from the meter. I cannot verify that without tearing into the wall or opening the meter, and I am not qualified to do either task. Both panels have their neutral and ground busses bonded, and both have labels stating that they are ?service rated.? One panel has nothing but 2-pole breakers, and the other has a mix of 1-pole and 2-pole.
Is this a common installation? Is this a violation? Am I looking at two ?services? to the same building? What is the rating of the service (i.e., 200 amps or 400 amps)?
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Just as a side issue, I also discovered that a sub-panel located in a storeroom had neutral wires and EGCs tied to the same bus. I have already informed the hall manager that he needs to get an electrician out to fix that problem.