I am re-wiring my well house. The previous owner had run 12/2 wire (no
ground wire) from a 100 amp breaker on the service panel to a 30 amp
breaker in the yard on a metal stake, then on to the pump house. Along
this run were 2 splices covered with electrical tape.
SM: 100 amp breaker feeding 12 gage wire is a bit over capacity. 12 ga is
rated for 20 amps.
At the well
house he then ran a wire off one leg of the pressure switch and one
wire off the well casing to run a light bulb and heat tape. It looked
like an accident waiting to happen.
SM: I'm with you. Though, it probably worked fine for many years.
The pump motor is: 3450rpm, 3/4HP; Franklin Electric Motor, model
#2445070117, 3/4HP, 1ohm, 230V, 3450rmp, 6.0amp, 2 wire
I plan to use a 60 watt bulb for freeze protection.
The distance to the well from the service entrance is ~65 feet. I plan
to use 12/2 w/gound in conduit (I already have this wire and want to
avoid buying more wire)
SM: Yep, wire is expensive. Your 12-2 should feed your 6 amp pump just fine.
Questions:
1. Will a two pole 20amp breaker be sufficient at the service
entrance?
SM: Yes, that should drive your 6 amp motor just fine.
2. If I pull a single 12 gauge wire to the well house, along with the
12/2, can I wire in a 110 circuit for a light?
SM: A black colored stranded wire sounds good. Make the two blacks hot, and
the white a neutral.
3. How do I wire the circuit at the well house. Do I need a sub-panel
at the well house with a 20 amp, two pole breaker and a single pole 15
amp breaker?
SM: I'd want a disconnect switch for when you or someone else is working on
the equipment.
Wiring to the pump seems straightforward but wiring for a simple light
bulb seems to be adding quite a bit of cost.
SM: Do some net search, see if you can find 220 volt light bulbs. Skip the
110 volt sub circuit.
http://www.google.com/products?hl=en...-8&sa=N&tab=wf