So if a modern panel board (after, say 1985) does not have tandemized slots, it is not UL listed to accept a tandem breaker? Is that correct? As a lifelong residential electrical contractor, I’m amazed at how murky and misunderstood this topic is. Maybe manufacturers could be a little more clear? The labels are often vague or in hard to read places. Thanks!
Thank you for your message George. We house most of our documentation in a virtual database here: www.se.com/ww/en/download/. If this does not address your concerns, please reach out to a technical support person in your location.www.se.com/ww/en/work/support/country-selector/contact-us.jsp
I don’t understand the point of this? Why limit where you can put tandems?
Probably to keep the homeowner from putting a tandem in every single slot and overloading the panel.
So if a modern panel board (after, say 1985) does not have tandemized slots, it is not UL listed to accept a tandem breaker? Is that correct? As a lifelong residential electrical contractor, I’m amazed at how murky and misunderstood this topic is. Maybe manufacturers could be a little more clear? The labels are often vague or in hard to read places. Thanks!
Thank you for your message George. We house most of our documentation in a virtual database here: www.se.com/ww/en/download/. If this does not address your concerns, please reach out to a technical support person in your location.www.se.com/ww/en/work/support/country-selector/contact-us.jsp
so touching for an excellent video
Very helpful video. Thank you!
😆 I’m sorry but I was expecting to watch how the break would be fully installed at non tandemized slot, the video finished just before that! 😆
Thank you just solved a nagging mystery.