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No. If device draws 200 amps breaker will trip.
No, the conductor is too small. The feeder to a 120/240 volt sub panel should be a 1/0 copper or a 2/0 aluminium conductor. This size conductor will limit the voltage drop to 3% or less when supplying 125 amps for 125 feet on a 240 volt system. ACWU 90 (Armoured Cable Wet location Underground 90 degree C). ACWU 90 cable is code approved for direct burial and is used in many projects as an underground service distribution feeder. Aluminium is much cheaper than copper for this type of installation.
A 100 amp panel should have a conservatively rated busbar and wiring but this says nothing about your particular panel. If you are asking a question relating to safety it needs to be seen by an electrician.
A #1 copper wire with an insulation rating of 90 degrees C is rated at 140 amps.
Three or four would be normal. The total current should not exceed the rating of the main panel, so depending on how intensively the different circuits are used, more could be installed.
You should not load a 125 amp panel any more than 100 amps.
Shift pattern from neutral is 1 down, 5 up.
The as yet undiscovered and fictional element hugeonium will have many electrons, possibly in excess of 125.
A 3/0 aluminum conductor will limit the voltage drop to3% or less when supplying 125 amps for 175 feet on a 220 volt system. If the 125 amp load is a sub distribution panel that is not going to be fully loaded to 125 amps then using the exact connected load, which might be smaller than 125 amps will effect the wire sizing. The grounding conductor for that size distribution panel is #6 bare copper.
You can but you may need new Service wires ran to your house to support the larger load. You will probably be looking at paying a couple thousand dollars for it.
This mount can hold up to 125 pounds, and accommodates most 52" flat panel TVs.
No. If device draws 200 amps breaker will trip.
Down is 1st, up is 2nd to 5th and between 1st and 2nd is neutral. (I hope you didn't mean clutch plates).
A #2 copper conductor with an insulation factor of 90 degrees C is rated at 130 amps.
No, the conductor is too small. The feeder to a 120/240 volt sub panel should be a 1/0 copper or a 2/0 aluminium conductor. This size conductor will limit the voltage drop to 3% or less when supplying 125 amps for 125 feet on a 240 volt system. ACWU 90 (Armoured Cable Wet location Underground 90 degree C). ACWU 90 cable is code approved for direct burial and is used in many projects as an underground service distribution feeder. Aluminium is much cheaper than copper for this type of installation.
A 100 amp panel should have a conservatively rated busbar and wiring but this says nothing about your particular panel. If you are asking a question relating to safety it needs to be seen by an electrician.
Its either the dogs or the shift forks