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We just closed on a 103 year old craftsman house that has a 1950's vintage Federal Pacific 200 Amp panel in it. The home inspector flagged it as a p.o.s. hazard and we got a $2K allowance to have it replaced.I've done a couple of searches here and on google looking for any consensus of a high quality main break panel. Most threads come up from years 2005 ~2010. It seems like most commodity things, a number of companies were consolidated, bought out, went of business and its a race to the bottom for price over quality of products. Is there any significant differnces between the major manufacturers like Cutler Hammer, or Square D? The realtor had an electrician put together an estimate with a BR style Cutler Hammer panel. I don't have a sense if it is a good, better or best range, or just what he can grab easily at Home Depot.Does anyone have a recommendation of a particular panel line ? Should I look for copper bus bars, special kinds of breakers, other? Anything geared towards the audiophile/videophile inmates here on AC would dig? Fwiw, I was also planning to have an Environmental Potentials EP-2050 surge and noise filter and their EP-2750 high frequency ground filter added per the various recommendations here on AC.ThanksKenreau
Square D QO. Plated copper bus. Breakers are rated very good.Stay away from the Square D Homeline series! It has aluminum bus. I don't care for the Homeline series breakers either.Question. Will the electrician be pulling an electrical permit for the electrical panel replacement?
Square D QO. Plated copper bus. Breakers are rated very good.Stay away from the Square D Homeline series! It has aluminum bus. I don't care for the Homeline series breakers either.
Have you thought about running JPS labs wire to your room?
Spent 12 years at Eaton and the Cutler Hammer panels are top notch. Put some Arc Fault breakers in for bedrooms to help drive up my pension value as well please!
Good to know, thanks. Yes, permitted. Adding grounding electrodes and rods to bring up to NEC codes.
Random thoughts:d] Add a whole house surge suppressor.g] If you have a multi-circuit A/V system, run a feeder to the A/V room and add a sub-panel there.h] Over-size conductors to the A/V system are good.i] Romex® is better than the typical metal conduit job.
Kenreau,What did the electrician say about the existing branch circuit wiring in the house? What type of wiring still exists in the house? Still have some old knob and tube wiring? Updated to 2 wire NM cable (Romex)? Updated to 2 wire with ground MN-B cable (Romex)? Where is the electrical panel located?Did the electrician do a walk through the house looking at wall receptacles, ceiling lighting fixtures, kitchen receptacle outlet locations, check for the number of branch circuits supplied to the kitchen, check for a separate 20 amp circuit for bathrooms with GFCI protection? The list could go on.....I guess what I am trying to say did the electrician say anything about the city electrical inspector may require the electrical wiring may need to be updated to meet current code? He should have....Once an electrical permit is pulled the door is opened for the electrical inspector to have a look around. HE will have the final say in the end what is acceptable and what is not. The electrician should be able to tell you up front pretty much what needs to be done. It all comes done to time and money.... His time your money + materials.ASK lots of questions! Is the electrician giving you a ballpark price for the total job or just a price to change out the electrical panel and add the necessary main earth grounding system for the electrical service. That could end up being the cheapest part of the job in the end.......
Random thoughts:a] If the Federal Pacific lasted this long, it wasn't one with the safety problem.
IMO this statement is not accurate. It may be that the conditions that would cause an FP breaker to fail haven't been met yet in this residence. I replaced an FP panel in my last house and it is my understanding that the problem is they fail to trip when the load exceeds the breakers limit creating the potential fire hazard. If they aren't "tested" by an excessive load they may last forever but still be a potential safety problem under the right conditions.