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Here’s the deal – trying to set up a small grow room in the garage, nothing complicated, but landlord concerned about the load on the house by doing so. I maybe putting out 6-8 amps out MAX, so not too worried about the load in/out of the garage. He is more concerned about the current set up of the house as a whole, “especially with all those lights and fans I have in my closet”. Looks like the way the routing of all the circuits are currently, could be redone and would help eliminate the shorts he’s been getting when running... let’s say a space heater in the winter.
Here is the current setup;
20a ?
20a kitchen outlets
20a washer, living room outlets, all 3x bedroom outlets,
100a main? 100a main? (both under "service disconnect"
15a garage
15a ?
15a exterior lights, hall, living & 3x bedroom ceiling lighting
15a attic/crawlspace exhaust fan
We tested them all and found that 2 (with the ?’s) have nothing attached. Could we take the washer off the 20a its sharing now and give it its own breaker? Can we split up the other 15a and spread some of the love around so that it doesn’t get too overloaded, when he lights up that space heater with other items on?
Or… could it all be solved even easier/cheaper by just upgrading the breakers that are in there now +5a? 15 to 20, the 20 to a 30a?
He called an old electrician of his and got a crazy estimate of nearly $1k, with 3 line items on the estimate that read: 1) install new 120volt circuit to split of existing circuit to allow for more devices to operate on a given circuit $250.00 2) install new dedicated circuit to existing outlet $350.00 3) install new dedicated circuit to new outlet $350.00
Let me know what you think? How much of this can one do on their own with minimal knowledge? Not looking to add anything, per say. maybe more so upgrade whats already there. 15a to 20a on one or two points. to lesson the likely hood of a short?
Otherwise (and ideally) how would I spread the others around? especially to the 2 dormant 15a's?
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