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#1
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I just recently bought a house that was made in the 1950's. I would
like to add a hot tub to the house (220V). Protection to the house's electrical system is provided by a fuse box - which is full. My question is, how do I add a sub panel to the fuse box assuming that the electrical system can handle the load? I am assuming that I branch the wire directly off (in parallel) of where it comes into the fuse box. |
#2
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Zack wrote:
I just recently bought a house that was made in the 1950's. I would like to add a hot tub to the house (220V). Protection to the house's electrical system is provided by a fuse box - which is full. My Do you have adequate service to the home? |
#3
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Do yourself a favor and get a new 200 amp panel. If the fusebox is
full, theres really no sense in risking overloading it. |
#4
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So are you telling me to replace the fuse panel? I really would rather
not... seems like alot of work. I am checking to see if I have adequate service to the house. Assuming I do, I would just like to know how to add a subpanel for the additional load of a hot tub. |
#5
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"Zack" wrote:
I just recently bought a house that was made in the 1950's. I would like to add a hot tub to the house (220V). Protection to the house's electrical system is provided by a fuse box - which is full. My question is, how do I add a sub panel to the fuse box assuming that the electrical system can handle the load? I am assuming that I branch the wire directly off (in parallel) of where it comes into the fuse box. You have to disconnect an existing 220v circuit, connect up the subpanel to where this circuit was, and then reconnect the existing circuit(s) up to the new sub-panel. By the time one does this much fiddling around, replacing the fuse box with a new service is usually not that much more expensive, since your already doing most of the work anyway. |
#6
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You could hook up an A/B switch to your fuse panel, and if it is in the
A position it would feed your fuse box, and if in the B position it would feed your new panel. You could probably even install 220v outlets throughout your house and just plug everything into them. - Jeff Wisnia |
#7
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![]() If the fuse box is the original to the house and it was built in the 50's and is now full you will need to up grade. Think about how many more appliances we now use compared to back then,-large ref.,elec dryer, multiple tv's, computers, microwaves etc. It may be a lot of work to upgrade but if you overload and cause a fire can you live in your new hot tub? -- beachbum ------------------------------------------------------------------------ beachbum's Profile: http://homerepairforums.org/forums/member.php?userid=47 View this thread: http://homerepairforums.org/forums/s...ad.php?t=75301 This post was submitted via http://www.HomeRepairForums.org |
#8
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![]() "Zack" wrote in message oups.com... I just recently bought a house that was made in the 1950's. I would like to add a hot tub to the house (220V). Protection to the house's electrical system is provided by a fuse box - which is full. My question is, how do I add a sub panel to the fuse box assuming that the electrical system can handle the load? I am assuming that I branch the wire directly off (in parallel) of where it comes into the fuse box. Call several licensed electrical contractors in your area and get estimates. Then you will know if you can add in another subpanel. Your concept of ".....assuming that I branch the wire directly off (in parallel) of where it comes into the fuse box." Is not a acceptable method. If I understand correctly what your doing. Others have stated, get a new service. which considering the era of the equipment you have is good advice. |
#9
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Zack wrote:
I just recently bought a house that was made in the 1950's. I would like to add a hot tub to the house (220V). Protection to the house's electrical system is provided by a fuse box - which is full. My question is, how do I add a sub panel to the fuse box assuming that the electrical system can handle the load? I am assuming that I branch the wire directly off (in parallel) of where it comes into the fuse box. What size main fuses are in your existing fuse box? This should tell you what size service wires you have. (I will assume a standard 60A Square D fuse box.) Do you have an electric range? If not, the cartridge fuse pullout labelled "RANGE" can be used to power your hot tub (with proper GFCI protection, etc.) or used to power a small subpanel. If the RANGE connections are already being used by a water heater, dryer, etc., you are kind of out of luck unless your fuse box has feed thru lugs (lets you tap in after the MAIN fuses). A better solution is to replace the fuse box with a breaker panel -- it doesn't have to be 200A. You need to run a load analysis to see how much you need (I only needed about 85A when I ran the calculations, but opted for a 150A panel instead of a 100A or 125A so I would have enough capacity to add a big subpanel later for a workshop.) Bob |
#11
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On 22 Feb 2005 08:44:26 -0800, "Zack" wrote:
I just recently bought a house that was made in the 1950's. I would like to add a hot tub to the house (220V). Protection to the house's electrical system is provided by a fuse box - which is full. My question is, how do I add a sub panel to the fuse box assuming that the electrical system can handle the load? I am assuming that I branch the wire directly off (in parallel) of where it comes into the fuse box. imho: Do not assume, and do not add any branches or new subpanels till you have a service calc done. What is your service panel even rated for? later, tom @ www.Love-Calculators.com |
#12
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There's not much price difference between the 150 and 200 amp service.
So you might as well get the 200. |
#13
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Mikepier wrote:
There's not much price difference between the 150 and 200 amp service. So you might as well get the 200. But a 150A can be run (with great difficulty) in a 1 1/4 conduit if that's what he's got already. (Use 1 1/2 or 2" if you gotta run new service conduit anyway) And the wire is a lot cheaper for 150A. And the panel is a little bit smaller and might be easier to fit in the existing space. He needs to do the load calculations and see what size he really needs though, then probably go one size larger. Best regards, Bob |
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