Can an Upgraded Panel Improve Energy Efficiency?
One of the best targets for improved energy efficiency in an electrical system is the electrical panel. Not only is the electrical panel easily accessible to service, but the return on the investment in the upgrade is rock solid. Typical home users should see at least $30 per month in savings on their electrical bills. That number can go significantly higher for high-demand users, such as homeowners with large HVAC units, freezers, EV charging stations, top-end computers and electric ovens. In a normal household, that means the cost recovery will take at most several years to break even.
Sources of Inefficiency in Older Panels
Electrical systems suffer multiple problems due to age. Each worsens the efficiency of the system.
The simplest problem is that connections deform and loosen. Even at lower amperage levels, electricity will cause connections to slowly fail through thermal stress. Contractions and expansions over time from varying levels of electricity make the connections weaker. Eventually, the system spends significantly more electricity just overcoming the weak connection.
Oxidation and corrosion also affect the metals in an electrical panel. Moisture and pollution in the air react to the metals, triggering negative reactions. Oxidized and corroded metals make poor conductors, leading to increased electrical resistance. The system will usually overcome the electrical resistance, but it requires more juice to do so. Likewise, overcoming resistance generates more heat, triggering a negative feedback loop because heat accelerates these reactions.
Vibrations add up over an electrical panel’s lifetime, too. Even an imperceptible rumble from an HVAC unit near the electrical panel is enough to loosen the connections over decades.
Older electrical panels often don’t have the best components and materials, either. For example, copper is the industry standard for efficient conductivity. Aluminum is still in use, but some older systems used steel or brass in the bus bars to save money. The bus bars are the main organizing components of the electrical panel, with connections coming into and going out of them. Poor-quality materials in the bus bars mean worse efficiency.
If your home’s electrical panel is outdated still has anything other than circuit breakers in it, then you can almost guarantee that an upgrade and panel replacement will be a winning plan. Modern circuit breakers easily outperform old fuse systems in electrical efficiency. Likewise, circuit breakers are much safer. If the panel doesn’t have circuit breakers, then an upgrade should be presumed.
Benefits of Newer Panels
The top modern electrical panels have desirable features that often didn’t exist when the old ones went in. Smart systems have made electrical panels vastly better than they were even ten years ago. Load balancing in today’s smart panels can reduce strain on individual circuits, improving efficiency.
Built-in monitoring also ensures improved fault detection so an electrician can replace faulty components sooner. This prevents some of the compounding effects that occur with aging parts in panels.
You can even control the circuits remotely, allowing you to turn circuits on or off based on need. For example, you might not need the electricity on all the time in a guest bedroom or workshop. Any circuit that’s on will have some draw, even if everything in the room is turned off. Almost no plugged-in electrical device truly ever operates at zero draw when there’s electric available to it. The smart panel allows you to turn off those circuits to prevent unneeded draw.
Call Mister Sparky for Electrical Panel Upgrades in Tampa, FL
An electrical panel upgrade can make a major difference in your home’s energy efficiency. Contact Mister Sparky today to have a skilled electrician do the job.