Not sure why my response was quoted there...I believe I was electrician #2 out of now 4 electricians who have all recommended a professional do the work...that being said, the reply of mine you quoted was not even directed at the OP...it was directed towards a person who called a residential feed 'high voltage'
I literally at no point told the OP to do it themselves, I simply told them what I would do to remedy the situation, it's up to them to decide whether they should tackle it or get a pro. I still think my idea of smoking up and feeding your electrician friends will be the safest and cheapest way to go lol
your post was relevant, and i agreed with most of it so i quoted you. this isn't a bad thing buddy, i promise. you and that other guy got pissy with each other, with no true solution reached.
you and i both think op's best bet is to hire someone, and not risk electrocution. you know how it can go when joe shmoe decides to run his/her own wiring. it's either us or the fire department that fixes the problems that inevitably arise...
still, when working a double pole 30a, you need to decide what you're running. if your ballasts are multi tap magnetrons, you can run 120vac or 240vac, depending on how you wire the ballast (also 208, 277, and 400). for a single or even two ballasts 1kw, i'd run 12/2 on a single pole 20a, more than enough. a 10a (or two 15a single pole) could be used for timers, pumps, fans, etc.
but if you're asking here, and expecting potheads to give you concrete electrical advice, you've already started on the wrong foot...
cool with you though
@Giddy up , just remember not to let people get to you. vindictive attitudes are not received well by offensive mentalities, and you end up with bs arguments and stuff.