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Located on a serviced municipal road that sees little traffic and surrounded by lovely neighbours, you will feel welcomed on the Meadow Road. Perfect jumping point to snowmobile trails, fishing, hunting or hiking. Perfect location to make this house your home or your base camp for all things outdoors. And yes I did realize that if I went over, it would just trip the main breaker, I was trying to understand how much draw was being put on the service so I knew if I was really close to max, or if I had room for expansion, etc.1.9 ACRES OF SURVEYED PROPERTY surrounds this starter home, camp or get-away. Thanks for the replies, it appears I am fine with my power use. I was adding up amps thinking I had to total less than 100, but I really needed to work with volt amps or watts, and remember that a 10 amp microwave doesn't use 1/3 of the power of a 30 amp 220v dryer, it uses about 1/6th of the power. You have basically answered my question though, the service is 100 amps at 220 volts or 24000 watts (or is this what va means? 'volt amps' is basically 'watts'?) And the main breaker clearly says that it shuts off if you go over 100 gallons per minute.' See what I mean? This is where electricity confuses me. But then you can go ahead and hook up faucets that will pull more than 100 gallons per minute in your home, and it will be fine. If you try to pull more than that, this emergency switch will shut off. To me it would be like saying 'well this pipe can only push 100 gallons per minute. I guess I couldnt see how each leg has 100 amps, when there is only (1) 100 amp breaker for the entire box. There is a 100 amp breaker on the main service, I dont see how you can put 100 amps of draw on each bus bar/side of the breaker box.Īnyway, i am trying to understand this, as it seems MANY people do not, and I know lots of people like to give out advice with no idea of what they are talking about (I have an uncle who does electrical work who told me "220 volt appliances are better because they are so cheap to run - they use half the amps, so they cost half as much to run!"Ĭlick to expand.Sorry for not replying earlier. How can I be sure my service is enough? I also had an electrician tell me that 'each bus bar has 100 amps', and read it on another electrician forum I found, but that seems impossible.
#100 AMP BREAKER BOX PLUS#
NOt to mention a tv, computer etc etc.Īnd yet I have had an electrician tell me this is fine, have read online that this amount of load is fine, and my fathers house has similar appliances PLUS more/larger air conditioners and a dish washer, and he has no problems. This is 70 amps, without the toaster, microwave, coffee brewer, refrigerator or the air conditioners. An electric washer apparently uses about 15 amps. The electric dryer uses a 30 amp breaker.
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At 220 volts, this is 50 amps! And yet the unit only has a 30 amp breaker, does only 1 heating element work at a time? Even if this is true, this means the water heater uses 25 amps. It has two 5600 watt heating elements in it, which is 11,200 watts. Some sites suggest that if you had an electric range and central air, that you would want to move up to a 200 amp service, but that often 200 amps is overkill.Ī water heater though, uses a 30 amp breaker. I have an electric water heater, a newly installed washer and electric dryer, a fridge, microwave and toaster oven, coffee brewer BTU air conditioners running on a 100 amp service.įrom what I have read, this is ok. I have a question on figuring out how many appliances you can run on a 100 amp service.