• AA5B@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    In my experience people get by with a 3x25A (17 kW available, matches approximately a 70A service in the US)

    Wow, how do you do that?

    Of course over-provisioning is a thing but that’s crazy. Maybe you have much smaller appliances or assume much lower usage, but 70a basically assumes 2 major appliances at a time, using close to max load, and with nothing else turned on.

    Typical 240v major appliances

    • level 2 EV charger: 50a
    • stove: 50a
    • central ac: 40a
    • dryer: 40a
    • heat pump: 50a+
    • water heater: 50a

    Of course you won’t use them all at once and they won’t usually be drawing their full rated load but I would not want to deal with being limited to one at a time so I can also turn on the lights or use the microwave

    That can theoretically draw 280a, before you even count things like lights and small appliances. If you added up all possible circuits, you may be hitting 1000a theoretical in a modern house. I’m comfortable that My 200a service will handle any combination I might use, but 70a definitely not

    By contrast I once lived in an apartment with 60a service. It did not have most of these large appliances but I frequently tripped the main with combinations like stove + window ac + microwave + lights