First Legal grow and got a huge basement.

2ANONYMOUS

Well-Known Member
At the end of the day its going to be a expense no again one thing investing in power upgrade in a property that has your name on lands title is Grand its a investment but if its a rental then WTF you doing
This is how I would do it: if i was owner of a older house that needed a service upgrade

1) Permanently install your new 200-amp panel in the best location possible. and to code
2) Install a 60-amp dual breaker in the new panel.
3) Run a #6-3 cable from this breaker to the old panel. Do not connect at this time.
4) Have the POCO completely remove the incoming power cable (service) from your old panel, and connect the cable you ran in step #3. (Congratulations! Your old main panel is now a sub-panel.)
5) Have the POCO connect service to your new main panel.
6) Migrate old circuits from your "sub-panel" over to your new main panel at your convenience.

I'd also probably get as much of the new/re-wiring out of the way up-front as possible, just so I wouldn't have to keep having the inspector back every few months. I know that some guys will tear out a foot-high horizontal strip of wall about 18" up throughout when they do a rewire, then sheetrock it closed when they're done. This would allow you plenty of access to run new house wiring and your structured cabling, and would leave the place more livable in the mean time by not ripping off entire wall coverings.

As far as why you don't want your structured wiring close to your 120v/240v wiring: Communications cable operates at a low voltage and current, and active house wiring can easily induce noise into it, thereby degrading the signal it carries. The rule of thumb, IIRC, is 12-inches of separation between a CAT-5e data cable and a power cable carrying up to 5000 Watts
 

hondagrower420

Well-Known Member
At the end of the day its going to be a expense no again one thing investing in power upgrade in a property that has your name on lands title is Grand its a investment but if its a rental then WTF you doing
This is how I would do it: if i was owner of a older house that needed a service upgrade

1) Permanently install your new 200-amp panel in the best location possible. and to code
2) Install a 60-amp dual breaker in the new panel.
3) Run a #6-3 cable from this breaker to the old panel. Do not connect at this time.
4) Have the POCO completely remove the incoming power cable (service) from your old panel, and connect the cable you ran in step #3. (Congratulations! Your old main panel is now a sub-panel.)
5) Have the POCO connect service to your new main panel.
6) Migrate old circuits from your "sub-panel" over to your new main panel at your convenience.

I'd also probably get as much of the new/re-wiring out of the way up-front as possible, just so I wouldn't have to keep having the inspector back every few months. I know that some guys will tear out a foot-high horizontal strip of wall about 18" up throughout when they do a rewire, then sheetrock it closed when they're done. This would allow you plenty of access to run new house wiring and your structured cabling, and would leave the place more livable in the mean time by not ripping off entire wall coverings.

As far as why you don't want your structured wiring close to your 120v/240v wiring: Communications cable operates at a low voltage and current, and active house wiring can easily induce noise into it, thereby degrading the signal it carries. The rule of thumb, IIRC, is 12-inches of separation between a CAT-5e data cable and a power cable carrying up to 5000 Watts
Yeah, fuck rentals. I wouldn't even fuck with that.

If I was in a rental I would scale my op to fit the house.
 

hondagrower420

Well-Known Member
No worries.. It's always a slow start, I'll probably start more of strain specific threads.. I don't want anybody to start counting my plants.. You know.
I got you. You goog to run in hydro this round. I read you mix it up sometimes.

I am about to pull my first dwc. Lost 2- 4x4 drain tables. I might just be moving everything to hydro.

Coco coir is technically hydro tho right? I never fucks with the coco.
 

hondagrower420

Well-Known Member
But I dont know how to wire shit. I was just guessing.

Kudos if anyone knows what this is. Think this was 2010 or some shit.
 

Blunted 4 lyfe

Well-Known Member
Dude I said it right here. That is most mains coming in are big enough in size to support 400a




Then I agreed and restated myself.


I think you need to actually read what I'm saying before attacking me.
Listen you fool there is no 400amp in a residential home, in order to get a 400amp service you have to demonstrate to your power company you have a need for 400amps, that means a load of 300 amps. A 400amp requires a 4" conduit that's too much weight and will rip your mast off the side of your house. As you said you're a carpenter and car mechanic and wannabe electrician, you showed a schematic of a parallel circuit I don't care if it is of a a/c to D/c converter but at the end of the day it's a parallel circuit. Stop your nonsense you're annoying as hell with your garbage. Anyone can replace a 100 amp box with a 200 but is it safe as I said if you load it with 60% then you just overloaded your feed. Just as Carolina Dreaming said the main panel is determined by wire size coming in from outside. Man you're a bad penny. Go back to your DC circuits and leave A/C circuits to the pros, ELECTRICIANS which I'm not but I do know A/C power you know 12-16v DC power. Hence you know jack shit.

B4L
 

ODanksta

Well-Known Member
I still have some of this strain I bought at the state legal store here in Oregon ,, its called Omega Dog,, stuff twists your head around,, those "betties" may actually dig it
Do you have any pics?

My brother just picked up a bunch of new shit. I haven't even been down stairs to check it out yet.
 
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