Thursday, July 26, 2012

Circuit Panel and Circuit Breakers

Circuit Panel and Circuit Breakers
The second most important maxim to remember when building a new home and installing your home’s electrical wiring is. “You can never have enough circuit breakers.” A Master Electrician will understand the needs and work specs/ requirements necessary. Permits can be obtained and work will be performed according to code requirements. Hiring a Master Electrician is your wisest investment.
As our homes today become increasingly filled with home theater systems, multiple computers, fancier lighting systems, and other new age kitchen appliances, residential electricity demand continues to rise. Gone are the days when 100 Amp circuit panel is sufficient.
This said, when meeting with your electrical contractor ask for a minimum of a 200 Amp circuit panel with 40 locations for circuit breakers. You may not initially need all of the circuit breaker locations, but over time you probably will. For example if you install a pool or build a home addition later on you will need additional circuit breakers.
If you are unfamiliar with a circuit panel, it is where all of the wires in your home get tied into and connected to circuit breakers. These circuit breakers are fed by one large circuit breaker that connects your home to the local electric grid. Typically each circuit breaker is targeted towards a specific room within the home. In some cases there may be multiple circuit breakers for a room.
There are national, state and local residential electrical wiring codes that specify the maximum number of outlets, switches and appliances that can be on a circuit breaker. Also, circuit breakers come in different shapes and sizes with different current rating capacities. The electrical codes also specify the current capacity of the circuit breaker for particular rooms. They also specify the types of rooms that need ground fault interrupt circuit breakers. For example, typically kitchens and bathrooms will require 20amp ground fault circuit breakers due to the number of appliances that are used in these rooms and the higher risk of electrical shock. Ground fault interrupt circuit breakers are designed to trip in the event an electrical appliance comes in contact with water, thus potentially saving your life.

No comments:

Post a Comment