If it was preinstalled, it may have been adequate at the time of installation. It depends on the power requirements of the home. If this is a new install, the NEC has a minimum of 100A for service equipment. To be honest, I would install 200A minimum to allow for future expansion.
A 60 amp panel for this size of a home would be undersized. Most homes today are wired for the main service distribution to have a 200 amp 42 circuit panel. With this size square foot area there would probably be a sub panel fed from the main distribution panel. The sub panel would be in the range of a 100 amp 20 circuit panel.
Toooo Small.
too small
Absolutely not. A 60 amp whole house service is totally insufficient to power todays home, especially a 2800 square foot house. The NEC (National Electric Code) requires a minimum of 100 amp electrical service to any single family residence.
Check the battery voltage on your tester. The voltage on the panel is the same throughout the whole electrical system.
If you are referring to electrical cord that would be, Service grade Oil resistant
Yes they are. I would only use them as a temporary measure until obtaining the correct Siemens breaker. There is a part of the electrical code about modifying electrical equipment which this could be construed as. If the panel certification is lost and the panel faults and a fire occurs, your insurance company might not cover the losses occurring from the fire.
If you are doing this you are effectively limiting your main panel to 100 A with normal duty cycles. This can get complicated and an electrician is advised. But basically you have a 100A breaker that would typically be for 220-240 volt service and you would connect to the main of the second panel. The size of the wire between the two panels would have to be sized correctly and you would only bond ground and neutral at the main panel and not the branch panel. You might want to move some of the loads from the main panel to the branch depending on load calculations. If you know what you are doing and have access to a clamp on amp meter you could measure how much of the 200 Amps you are using at the current panel. This can be dangerous, so get an electrician or be careful. <<>> In the trade this is called a sub panel. It is a complicated job in as much as you have to know wire sizes, ampacity of wires and proper electrical workmanship. Such a project should be left to a licensed electrical contractor to take out the proper permits and call for proper inspections. By taking this route it will leave you confident that if any mishaps happen to the installation down the road your insurance company will be behind you 100%.
Too small.
Absolutely not. A 60 amp whole house service is totally insufficient to power todays home, especially a 2800 square foot house. The NEC (National Electric Code) requires a minimum of 100 amp electrical service to any single family residence.
Check the battery voltage on your tester. The voltage on the panel is the same throughout the whole electrical system.
You would need to shutdown the power whenever you are working on the electrical service.
Depending on how many breakers you have in your exisiting panel if you only have a old 6 or 8 circuit panel then I would suggest a new panel, In the newer building world where you have a 20 or 30 circuit panel then I would suggest a sub panel.
A bad idea. That would be against the electrical code and the manufactures specifications.Another answer:Agreed. Only use approved structural material to hang an electrical panel. If you need to hang it away from an existing wall, use Unistrut.
If you are referring to electrical cord that would be, Service grade Oil resistant
You have to follow the lines. Could be blown fuse or any number of other things. Follow it back to the service.
infrared thermal camera
That depends on what you're trying to find.If there is NO power to the panel, you would put a volt meter across the lugs entering the panel or tighten the lugs holding the service cable.If one circuit is failing, you might want to remove the breaker and verify that it isn't arcing at the rail, or you might want to replace the breaker.If you simply want to check to see if there IS an electrical panel, just search for it; it's usually not too far from the meter base.As usual, if you don't understand electricity, the dangers of electricity and the proper wiring standards and practices, leave it alone and request that an electrical contractor perform the work for you!
The same amount it would need from your electrical supplier.
I really do not see how this would be an infringement on the panel space and from a safety standpoint I see no problem with it. Of course I would not want to touch the panel if the floor was wet even though it would be no real safety issue if the panel was wired correctly. Just use common sense.