I know someone who use to design high end music and theater rooms. He would start with a high quality electric panel I believe he liked Equi=Tech.
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The usual top two I know of are Siemens and Square D which has a couple of different lines. I think Federated/Federal (can't remember the exact brand name) should be replaced when found. They were driven out of business for selling breakers that didn't break. GE is very popular but I've read reliability issues with the breakers. |
elevick Making sure it is properly grounded is more important than anything else. Don't ground it near the house ground.Actually, you should follow NEC and local code, which will require grounding the panel with your house ground and the utility's ground. Cutler-Hammer panels have tin-coated bus bars, which are preferable to aluminum bars, imo. |
I like Siemens for two reasons: (1) it's German, and (2) their high duty breakers and their regular breakers have the same part number. That means, IMO, that their regular breakers are made to high duty standards (i.e. 2000 on-off cycles). My audio sub-panel is Siemens, and I also use their circuit breakers for on-off switches, and haven't had a failure, though it's only been 4 years. I agree with cleeds: ground the panel with your house ground, or you may end up with a ground loop. Siemens, by the way, has a surge suppressor option. |
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