Whats good leds that dnt compromise on yields? I may make that switch rather than trying to spend 2k on a nice mini split to keep up with heat from HPSsI grow in warm climate, with no cooling
1. Run LEDS
2. Run them at night
Good! I'm not an electrician, but the wiring in that panel looks insane to me. Why are there neutral wires connected to breakers?Lol you guys are scaring me
After this harvest ill pay the extra for the professional work.Good! I'm not an electrician, but the wiring in that panel looks insane to me. Why are there neutral wires connected to breakers?
yeah i don't agree that 'led's compromise yields'. , not decent quality LED anyway. sorta old thinking.Whats good leds that dnt compromise on yields? I may make that switch rather than trying to spend 2k on a nice mini split to keep up with heat from HPSs
I'm not an electrician either but my guess is he is running 220v? So the black and white wires are hot and the neutral wire is actually a ground wire?Good! I'm not an electrician, but the wiring in that panel looks insane to me. Why are there neutral wires connected to breakers?
220 should have two hot wires, a neutral and a ground no?I'm not an electrician either but my guess is he is running 220v? So the black and white wires are hot and the neutral wire is also being used as a ground?
I'm pretty bad as this stuff though.
In my limited research, no. And it makes sense if you search for British plugs and see that they only have 3 prongs.220 should have two hot wires, a neutral and a ground no?
what ever it is, it looks dangerous.
I will hire a pro little bit later, this was a cheap guy who did this to get me by for little while.Well if a problem occurs where for some reason an over current condition exists on one of those receptacles then likely it will melt down, unless the breaker feeding the timer and thus the receptacles is a 15 amp breaker, it appears to be a 20, at least it's not a 30 amps which is what the #10 cable is rated for. I wonder what the breaker is feeding this from the garage and how the work looks behind that. You never run a cable out of the cover like that. The way the cable is run is not good at all, if you are gonna go sketch like that then at least use metal clad.
There is no neutral being run to the sub panel, thats just not ever done, should be 10-3 cable with the extra red wire for the second phase. The white wires that are apparently being used as the other hot phase should be marked with black or red tape on both ends to show it's not a neutral. We don't even need a sub panel there honestly. It's pointless.
Whoever did this has no idea what they are doing and that makes me wonder how pretty the termination of that #10 wire is landing on those 15 amp 120 volt receptacles (at 240 volts). It's difficult to cleanly land #10 wire on receptacles made for #14, then jam it back in the metal box lol, not saying it can't be done, shouldn't be done though and someone with the other apparent skills may have some sketch work going on behind the covers.
Let me ask you this is there a chance that this jank setup may be costing me more energy on my electric bill? Or anything like that? I did get solar panels on my home so thats big big help but just want to know all the concerns to this electric work. The guy for sure said my four lights would be good tho and they have so far. But definitely will get it professionally done and get those wires hid and cleaned.Well if a problem occurs where for some reason an over current condition exists on one of those receptacles then likely it will melt down, unless the breaker feeding the timer and thus the receptacles is a 15 amp breaker, it appears to be a 20, at least it's not a 30 amps which is what the #10 cable is rated for. I wonder what the breaker is feeding this from the garage and how the work looks behind that. You never run a cable out of the cover like that. The way the cable is run is not good at all, if you are gonna go sketch like that then at least use metal clad.
There is no neutral being run to the sub panel, thats just not ever done, should be 10-3 cable with the extra red wire for the second phase. The white wires that are apparently being used as the other hot phase should be marked with black or red tape on both ends to show it's not a neutral. We don't even need a sub panel there honestly. It's pointless.
Whoever did this has no idea what they are doing and that makes me wonder how pretty the termination of that #10 wire is landing on those 15 amp 120 volt receptacles (at 240 volts). It's difficult to cleanly land #10 wire on receptacles made for #14, then jam it back in the metal box lol, not saying it can't be done, shouldn't be done though and someone with the other apparent skills may have some sketch work going on behind the covers.
No.is there a chance that this jank setup may be costing me more energy on my electric bill?
Some of those do look undersized for a whole grow room that has to deal with inrush current, if those wires are heating up, you are paying for a wire heater.Let me ask you this is there a chance that this jank setup may be costing me more energy on my electric bill? Or anything like that? I did get solar panels on my home so thats big big help but just want to know all the concerns to this electric work. The guy for sure said my four lights would be good tho and they have so far. But definitely will get it professionally done and get those wires hid and cleaned.