Mike Holt Enterprises Electrical News Source

Aging Electrical Equipment

I wanted to pass along to you information from reports written about aging electrical equipment. I hope you find it has value.

The Residential Electrical System Aging Research Project is a Fire Protection Research Foundation study published by UL. It is limited to aging electrical equipment in dwelling units and shows, in general, that the electrical system ages well. There were issues with the tripping of breakers that had been exposed to wet or damp locations where the trip mechanism had corroded to the point that the breaker did not trip. In some cases repeated manual operation restored the function. Click here or on the image to read the report.

The State of North Carolina has published a document on the Hidden Risks of Aging Electrical Systems. Page 7 of that report has a table from the IEEE Gold Book, (Recommended Practice for the Design of Reliable Industrial and Commercial Power Systems) that shows the typical electrical equipment life expectancies. Click here to read or download that PDF.

Consulting-Specifying Engineering magazine has a slightly different table as to the equipment life expectancy. Click here to access that online report.

Comments
  • Very interesting as I have lived in Southeast Texas and was surprised when I moved here 4 years ago and found the Service breaker box located on the outside the home this is the norm not the exception. I have often wondered about the problems that could arise from the breakers being basically outside. Summer here is 80 percent humidity and 100 degree days.

    Thomas Martin  August 29 2019, 11:29 pm EDT
  • Reply from: Tom Horne   October 5 2019, 7:32 pm EDT
    The Southern Building Code used to require that the Service Disconnecting Means be outside the building. I'm guessing that was to facilitate control of the electrical power by responding firefighters but I emphasize that it is literally a guess. It has been decades since I worked in the South doing disaster recovery rewiring of flooded homes through my church. I have no idea whether the Southern Building Code is still used or even still exists.

    -- Tom Horne


Reply to this comment
* Your Name:
   Your name will appear under your comments.

* Your Email:
   Your email address is not displayed.
* Comments:

Email Notification Options:
Notify me when a reply is posted to this comment
Notify me whenever a comment is posted to this newsletter