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2026-01-06T10:00:00-0500 2026-01-06 10:00:?? 2026-01-06

2026-01-06 10:00:??

Paraphrased Teams conversation with a peer about distribution-designations#Terminations. Peer's messages are in block quotes.


Good morning! Do you add branch terminations to panelboards? If so, how does your 'distribution' section looks?

Morning! Yes to the first question, ? to the second

As all panelboards on a job don't have the same size/# of terminations, I assume you would have a plethora of same size boards in the job, with different terms. How do you list them?

Designation Status Quantity
1 Generator - 350kW, Diesel 1
2 Generator - 2000kW, Diesel 1
3 ATS - 200A 2
4 ATS - 250A 1
5 ATS - 400A 2
6 ATS - 600A 2
7 ATS - 800A 1
8 ATS - 1000A 1
9 Panelboard - 50A, 1-Section 1
10 Panelboard - 100A, 1-Section 18
11 Panelboard - 125A, 1-Section 26
12 Panelboard - 150A, 1-Section 2
13 Panelboard - 225A, 1-Section 11
14 Panelboard - 225A, 2-Section 5
15 Panelboard - 400A, 1-Section 2
16 Panelboard - 400A, 2-Section 3
17 Panelboard - 400A, 3-Section 5
18 Panelboard - 600A, 2-Section 1
19 Panelboard - 800A, 1-Section 1
20 Panelboard - 1200A, 1-Section 2
21 Panelboard - 1200A, 2-Section 1
22 Panelboard - 3000A, 1-Section 1
23 CT Cabinet
24 Power Monitor 82
25 SPD/TVSS 2

Ah, so you just chuck in a lot # of terms per board and call it good?

Essentially. Ben's direction was to pick a schedule on the upper end of terms for each size panel to be representative of the rest. At my old place I would have made a designation for each panel, I'm not upset to leave that behind. I see no reason you couldn't just make each size once and keep it in a temp job. I would, but I usually extract the schedules anyway so I just use the actual average.

Thank you for that. joel-jansen wagged his finger at me about missing terms this morning--- I wanted to see how it's preferred. I was told terms are captured by feeders/mech connections and have never added them to panelboards.

That would be the best way, finding the actual average.

The mech connection assemblies have the load side term, the feeder assemblies have both sides, the branch assemblies don't have either, that's why he got you, I think.

I don't think my way is best unless you already have all the circuits in a big table for other reasons. Lot of effort for a marginal increase in certainty above a heuristic like Ben's.

I'm working on a job Noah started now, he made certain panels separate from what I assume is the average and labeled them with the name of the panel. If I had a job where some were significantly more full than others I might do something similar, but I'd probably name them "... 1-Section, ~25% Fill"/"... 1-Section, ~75% Fill" instead. But that's a lot of mental overhead.