Saturday, June 25, 2011

Circuit panel install


 Here's the new panel that's going in. Its a Square D QO series panel and breakers.
  Here you go, proof I actually did it myself.
 Much cleaner now that some wires that went no where or were no longer hooked up were removed. You can see the surge protector too, the white rectangle at the bottom of the breakers on the right side. Some more info on it can be found here: http://www.apelectric.com/Square-D-QO-Surge-Breaker-p/qo2175sb.htm, they sell it there too but I found it for less at my local Home Depot. It's meant as part of the total surge solution, I still need to use surge protectors on my electronics, this is supposed to knock the surge down to the level a surge strip can actually handle. Unfortunately while doing this I discovered the only ground my house has is the gas piping which is supposed to be connected to the ground system on the home but not used as the ground. I've purchased 4 ground rods, two for the home and two for the garage and will post an update once I get them installed.

 You can see some of those cables that went nowhere. Now I need to crawl under the house and remove them. Ugh. It's normal practice to just cut them off but since there are so many and I want to rewire some of the home it will make it easier on me in the future to take the extra time and actually remove them now.

So that's it for replacing the panel. I had been quoted $1250 by an electrician and purchased the box for $150 shipped brand new from eBay and the breakers and surge protector I got for $250 at the local Home Depot. Now I've got an extra $850 to go towards my other projects, yay! More work!

Circuit panel removal

So part of the requirements to keep my homeowner's insurance after moving into the home was to remove the old Federal Pacific Electric Circuit panel. It appears that despite being a popular company a few decades back they are now looked at as a fire hazard. Two sources of more info on these panels: http://ismypanelsafe.com/fpe.aspx and http://www.inspectapedia.com/fpe/fpepanel.htm. Here's the old panel:
As you can see it was quite mess, looks like random things were added or removed throughout it's service. You can even see a doorbell transformer in there, needless to say that should not be mounted in a circuit panel, let alone be just put in hanging from the wires!

At least they used proper clamps to hold the wires.


 Some of the old wiring that's original to the home, it runs to all the light fixtures and the outlets upstairs.
 You can see how the old insulation was brittle and frayed in some spots.
 Luckily this wire was long enough I could cut off the dmaaged part in the new box.
Here's where the aluminum service wires enter the main breaker. Both carry 120 volts but at a different phase so when you run both to an appliance you get 240 volts for the heavy duty appliances like the stove, dryer and A/C unit.



No more power! Good thing it was a cool day.

Friday, June 24, 2011

New outlets.

Woo hoo, now we finally have an outlet under the sink for the dishwasher so we don't have to run the cord across the floor. The other one's for a garbage disposal. And they actually have a functioning ground! Whoever ran the wiring before just cut off the ground wire instead of hooking it up, now it's fixed.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Possum

:::No animals were harmed in the making of this post:::
Well, apparently I should have hooked up they dryer vent sooner, I was doin' it Westside and would just open the garage door and run the dryer with the vent facing the door. I went to use it today and some leaves and a plastic bag blew out. When I looked into the vent on the back this was the cause.
The poor little thing was a baby, we finally got it to run out, trembling as it escaped under the work bench. This was motivation enough to get me to install the vent! Now we can use the dryer with the garage door closed! Hooray!