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Posted by RBM on March 3, 2007, 7:41 pm
You may be flirting with disaster. Depending upon the size of the panel and
the particulars of the rest of your service, it may be a three or four hour
job, plus the materials. I'd call a few licensed electricians and get prices
>> On 3 Mar 2007 15:20:42 -0800, lgerha...@hotmail.com wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> >Hello all.
>>
>> >The past owners of the older home which I live in now had tried
>> >'fixing' things throughout the house (most notoriously venting a
>> >bathroom exhaust directly into a sealed attic space...*sigh*). One of
>> >these problems which I am now trying to undo involves them mismatching
>> >the electrical breaker box and the panel that covers it.
>>
>> >The box itself takes some odd-looking, older toggle (push in, push
>> >out) breakers, square in shape. The panel cover has the knockouts
>> >knocked-out for the newer, wide rectangular breakers.
>>
>> >I was warned when I purchased the house that this would have to be
>> >fixed, because it is dangerous--there is a major gap between the
>> >actual little square breakers and the holes from the knockouts for the
>> >other type of breaker.
>>
>> >Basically, my question is this: can I get *just* the panel for the
>> >existing breaker box? I'd rather do that if at all possible, instead
>> >of incurring the additional expense of having to replace all of the
>> >breakers to put in a totally new system.
>>
>> >Can anyone point me to a place where I can get just the cover? BTW, I
>> >can take pix, if that would help. Thanks so much in advance!! :)
>>
>> They make plastic spacers that just snap in empty breaker slots.
>>
>> You might be able to find something like this at an electrical supply.
>>
>> You might also be able to make some metal ones.
>>
>> A picture always helps.- Hide quoted text -
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>> - Show quoted text -
>
> I'll take a picture and post either tonight or tomorrow, thanks
> everyone.
>
> How hard would it be for me to shut off the main breaker, have the
> power company pull the meter, and me swap meticulously from this old
> box to a new one, if I have to replace everything? Is it something
> that a somewhat-savvy individual can do and then get an electrician to
> inspect, or am I flirting with disaster?
>
> Thanks again for the input!
>
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