lbohen
DIY
Our farm has a main 200 amp panel in the barn which services the barn, an addition to the barn with an apartment, an herb-gardening facility, and our house. The 200 amp panel has a whole house surge protector on it.
My herb-gardening tenant installed a sub-panel from the 200 amp panel, so she now pays for the electricity going to the herb-gardening facility. The herb-gardening facility includes a metal framed hoop-house with a propane furnace, fans, a few outlets, and a separate structure that blow-dries herbs.
I believe the surge protector on the 200 amp panel will trip if the system is struck by lightning or an electrical surge and that the surge protector, once tripped, would have to be replaced.
If the herb-gardening facility got struck by lightning, should its sub-panel have its own surge protector to protect the 200 amp panel from being shut down?
My herb-gardening tenant installed a sub-panel from the 200 amp panel, so she now pays for the electricity going to the herb-gardening facility. The herb-gardening facility includes a metal framed hoop-house with a propane furnace, fans, a few outlets, and a separate structure that blow-dries herbs.
I believe the surge protector on the 200 amp panel will trip if the system is struck by lightning or an electrical surge and that the surge protector, once tripped, would have to be replaced.
If the herb-gardening facility got struck by lightning, should its sub-panel have its own surge protector to protect the 200 amp panel from being shut down?