fandi
Senior Member
- Location
- Los Angeles
- Occupation
- Electrical Engineer
Hello All,
Many years ago, an electrical system for an apartment was designed with not much spare capacity (for the main service). Now one unit at a time adds an EV charger (32A) to that unit's load. A load calculation per section 220 was performed each time an EV charger is added to a unit to show that it's OK to add 32A to that unit's sub-panel. First few EV charger additions were OK until one EV charger make the main service overloaded. My question is what will happen if the main service panel is overloaded? If the main service panel is placed inside the apartment, would the place catch on fire because of wires being overheated?
Thanks.
Many years ago, an electrical system for an apartment was designed with not much spare capacity (for the main service). Now one unit at a time adds an EV charger (32A) to that unit's load. A load calculation per section 220 was performed each time an EV charger is added to a unit to show that it's OK to add 32A to that unit's sub-panel. First few EV charger additions were OK until one EV charger make the main service overloaded. My question is what will happen if the main service panel is overloaded? If the main service panel is placed inside the apartment, would the place catch on fire because of wires being overheated?
Thanks.