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  • dat
    replied
    Originally posted by SunEagle
    You will find out that the new electric code requires more that just two 20A circuits for the kitchen. Depending on the type of appliances and what can be plugged into a wall socket (microwave, coffee maker, toaster, blender, etc.) you may be required to have 6 circuits or more.
    I forgot to mention that refrigerators, microwave and toaster have its own circuit (not sharing). The two 20A circuits (sharing) are just for blender, coffee maker, charging phones and ipads, and other things that we rarely use daily. In my family room and living room, the entertainment center and the sub-woofers have its own circuit too.

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  • SunEagle
    replied
    Originally posted by dat
    When I bought my house, I had a certified technician pulled out all the old wires, switches, and outlets. I had him rewired bedrooms and bathrooms with a new 20A circuit for each room. Kitchen, living room and family room have two 20A circuits for each room.
    You will find out that the new electric code requires more that just two 20A circuits for the kitchen. Depending on the type of appliances and what can be plugged into a wall socket (microwave, coffee maker, toaster, blender, etc.) you may be required to have 6 circuits or more.

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  • dat
    replied
    When I bought my house, I had a certified technician pulled out all the old wires, switches, and outlets. I had him rewired bedrooms and bathrooms with a new 20A circuit for each room. Kitchen, living room and family room have two 20A circuits for each room.

    Leave a comment:


  • inetdog
    replied
    Originally posted by nomadh
    Should I really be that worried about al wiring? I think there are millions of unburnt houses out there like mine. Truth is I would have skipped over this house for a number of reasonsand the only selling point is that my mother in law wanted her daughter to have it and sold it to us at about 1/2 price and let us keep her tax rate. So pretty good deal for 1/2 price.
    Al wiring properly installed, using fixtures and devices designed for connecting both Cu and Al wires can be perfectly safe. A lot safer than Zinsco power panels for sure!
    The problem is that much of the Al wiring was installed before its problems were understood and the wrong connecting practices were followed, treating it just as the electricians has treated the Cu wire they were used to.

    For a house that has OLD Al wiring, the simplest way to make it far safer is to hire an electrician to open up every place that Al wires are connected (switches, lights, appliances) and add a short piece of copper wire to each end, using an approved wire nut or crimped splice, with an anti-oxidant coating added during assembly.
    Or you could replace all of the switches, receptacles and wire nuts in the house with ones approved for Al wiring.

    There are millions of unburnt houses like yours out there, along with tens of thousands that have suffered a small, large, or total electrical fires. How do you feel about the odds?

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  • nomadh
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunking
    If it were me I would be calling a Real-Estate agent.
    Should I really be that worried about al wiring? I think there are millions of unburnt houses out there like mine. Truth is I would have skipped over this house for a number of reasonsand the only selling point is that my mother in law wanted her daughter to have it and sold it to us at about 1/2 price and let us keep her tax rate. So pretty good deal for 1/2 price.

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  • Sunnyvalejohn
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunking
    Zinsco translated to English means Burning Down the House. Zinsco was sued out of business because of a design flaw which the circuit breakers connection to the bus bar becomes loose causing arcing and over heating resulting in fire. They are such a liability Electricians will not work on a house if they have a Zinsco panels as they are too much risk and liability. In the electrical trade last man who works on it owns it. No electrician wants to be caught as the Last Man working on a building with a Zinsco panel. Breakers are still available made by GE and others that fix the problem but they are very expensive due to the liability. In all cases it is just less expensive and less risk to just replace the whole panel and be done with it.
    Thanks! Now you tell me Glad to be rid of it. Just got a new Siemens Solar-Ready Electrical Panel. I took pictures and posted on my thread over here. http://www.solarpaneltalk.com/showth...ns-Solar-Ready

    Cheers,
    John

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  • Sunking
    replied
    If it were me I would be calling a Real-Estate agent.

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  • nomadh
    replied
    Thanks for all the replies. Sorry I somehow missed them till now. I had another quote and got more info recently. Yes mine is overhead cabled and that the homeowner pays for the new bigger riser conduit through the roof. It was implied to me that sdge pays for the wire overhead to my panel. Mine currently is a push button bulldog 100 amp it seems. Mounted on the outside of the garage in stucco. It also seems most of my circuits were done in aluminum. Lucky me. So thats not great but the house is 3 prog wired and although AL causes more potential problems the electricians seem to have no problem dealing with it. I did have 1 company say if I downsized my system (to less than 5.7 kw I believe) I could maybe skip the upgrade but the 2 electricians who've seen it say I should upgrade the old panel even if I never do solar. But then, every problem looks like a nail to a hammer
    Thanks for all your input so far on this journey.

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  • Sunking
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunnyvalejohn
    Wish I had you around here in the Bay Area! I was getting quotes for just a panel upgrade from 100a Zinsco piece of #$#@ to 200a in stucco and the prices ran $2500 to $3800. Yeesh.
    Zinsco translated to English means Burning Down the House. Zinsco was sued out of business because of a design flaw which the circuit breakers connection to the bus bar becomes loose causing arcing and over heating resulting in fire. They are such a liability Electricians will not work on a house if they have a Zinsco panels as they are too much risk and liability. In the electrical trade last man who works on it owns it. No electrician wants to be caught as the Last Man working on a building with a Zinsco panel. Breakers are still available made by GE and others that fix the problem but they are very expensive due to the liability. In all cases it is just less expensive and less risk to just replace the whole panel and be done with it.

    Leave a comment:


  • JCP
    replied
    Originally posted by dat
    If he lives in the Bay Area, then his quote will be different.
    Well, in the bay area, if you have to replace underground conduit, I was told $7 to $10K...

    Leave a comment:


  • dat
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunnyvalejohn
    Wish I had you around here in the Bay Area! I was getting quotes for just a panel upgrade from 100a Zinsco piece of #$#@ to 200a in stucco and the prices ran $2500 to $3800. Yeesh.
    If he lives in the Bay Area, then his quote will be different.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sunnyvalejohn
    replied
    Originally posted by MGE
    Those prices that you have been quoted seem high to me. When I had my business running here in SD (IBEW Union shop 96-2012) Typical cost to upgrade a panel was around $1,500. Thats for a 200 amp panel. If your existing panel is 60amps increase it to the 200a the price will be about the same as a 100a. Same labor cost just a bit more for the materials. Good luck.
    Wish I had you around here in the Bay Area! I was getting quotes for just a panel upgrade from 100a Zinsco piece of #$#@ to 200a in stucco and the prices ran $2500 to $3800. Yeesh.

    Leave a comment:


  • foo1bar
    replied
    Originally posted by inetdog
    Which is why, as long as space is available in the conduit or the run is overhead, aluminum conductors are often used instead. When terminated correctly they can be perfectly safe, and the NEC is happy with them too.
    You do have to make sure that the equipment (panel, etc.) is rated for use with Al wire and the lugs can accept the larger diameter necessary for Al at the same current level.
    Yep.
    Would have been ~$2.75/foot for 4/0 alum. Instead of ~$6.60/foot for 2/0 copper.
    So would have been a $200 cost for the wire instead of $500.

    But I had it cut and then circumstances took me down a path where I actually *could* have done alum. And by that time it was too late - once it's cut to length there's no returning it.

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  • inetdog
    replied
    Originally posted by foo1bar
    ... (couldn't believe how expensive copper wire was when I bought that.... I think it was ~$2.20/foot per conductor.)
    Which is why, as long as space is available in the conduit or the run is overhead, aluminum conductors are often used instead. When terminated correctly they can be perfectly safe, and the NEC is happy with them too.
    You do have to make sure that the equipment (panel, etc.) is rated for use with Al wire and the lugs can accept the larger diameter necessary for Al at the same current level.

    Leave a comment:


  • foo1bar
    replied
    Originally posted by MGE
    Those prices that you have been quoted seem high to me. When I had my business running here in SD (IBEW Union shop 96-2012) Typical cost to upgrade a panel was around $1,500. Thats for a 200 amp panel. If your existing panel is 60amps increase it to the 200a the price will be about the same as a 100a. Same labor cost just a bit more for the materials. Good luck.
    $2200-2700 seem low to me - but I had to run new underground conduit.
    It was $500 for just the 2/0 copper wires coming from the utility to my meter. Add in trenching, conduit, the panel/meter itself, and labor... I don't see an electrician doing it for $2700 and staying in business.

    If it had been overhead, so no trenching, then $1500-$2200 is possible. (couldn't believe how expensive copper wire was when I bought that.... I think it was ~$2.20/foot per conductor.)

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