FEDERAL PACIFIC ELECTRICAL PANELS - why their panels are dangerous

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Electrician U

Electrician U

3 жыл бұрын

As electricians, we always hear people say "You should get rid of that FEDERAL PACIFIC panel" and replace it with a new one. What is the story behind all of this, and why is it a big deal?
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Federal Pacific panels are installed in homes all over America and Canada, and have been since the 50's and 60's. The problem with this is that the breakers oftentimes don't work. There's actually quite a long history of coverups and lies that occurred over the past several decades, which ended up in fraud charges, and ultimately the collapse of the Federal Pacific Electric Company.
The big thing to take away is that Federal Pacific was caught lying about their adherence to UL standards. They were stripped of their UL listing over the years but continued to print "UL Listed" on the packaging and continued pushing out breakers that had up to a 60% failure rate for decades.
Many replacement breakers are made today, that fit into these older systems such as Zinsco, FPE, Wadsworth, Challenger, and Pushmatic - however, some believe these products should not be used, and rather the entire panel should be replaced. The argument though, is that not everyone can afford a brand new panel replacement. When you consider the cost of adding surge protection, proper grounding, arc-fault, ground-fault, and dual-function breakers, and potentially indoor AFCI protection for circuits that cannot be protected at the panel, simply replacing breakers is a much more affordable solution.

Пікірлер: 859
@Rubbernecker
@Rubbernecker 3 жыл бұрын
Yep, the house I live in now had breakers made by those assholes. They started crackling and buzzing, and lights started flickering. Walked out into the garage and smelled smoke. Called my electrician and 48 hours later I had a brand new panel.
@BigDawgTE
@BigDawgTE 3 жыл бұрын
We had one of those when my middle child was born. I found out the incidence of electrical fires in our subdivision was 7x the national avg., and we immediately got it changed. My kids grew up safe and strong.
@MarcCabot
@MarcCabot 3 жыл бұрын
This is a great case study; and told very well! As an engineer myself, I can throw in a few bits of info: Failure rate is often associated with the rate of failure post quality control. So, if the failure rate of a widget were, say, 1% then we can expect 1 in every 100 widgets to fail *after* they have passed quality control; typically during usage. This number is often accompanied with a "MTF" or "Mean Time to Failure" indicating the average length of time before failure occurs, which can be indicated in service time, real time, etc. Sometimes, it can be an entirely different metric like mileage, mating cycles (for connectors), etc. These numbers are typically used to calculate the warranty period, by the way... The percentage of failure off of the assembly line (Quality Control failures, which I think is more what we're talking about here) is usually indicated by a "Yield" amount. This is usually the percentage of QC passed widgets per production run, expressed as a percentage. This number can sometimes change depending on the production run size due to the technologies implemented for that particular production scale.
@wallychambe1587
@wallychambe1587 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, my wife inherited her dad's house when he passed and I ended up rewiring the whole thing. It was all on 4 Federal pacific breakers. While working on the wiring I had all the breakers turned off but after double checking I found two of the circuits were still hot with the breakers off!!! 🤬Pulled the meter to be sure for safety! 👍
@davealmighty9638
@davealmighty9638 2 жыл бұрын
I never trust a breaker, and always check with a meter.
@circuitbreaker9001
@circuitbreaker9001 3 жыл бұрын
I worked for Schneider Electric for 16 years as a service rep in Ontario. Around 20 years ago they took the Square D design and installed that in the stab Loc breakers. That fixed the not tripping problem with those breakers. They stopped making the panels several years ago. They kept making the breakers as the base was very high and the electricians complained. This year they put out a notice that they are dropping several types and sizes of the stab loc line. I would guess it is just a matter of time they drop it all. Federal was a Canadian company and square D was US. So Schneider wants to drop the Canadian company. The Square D Breakers have always been the best breaker on the market. You could put a paper clip on it to ground and it would trip so fast you could hold the clip without burning your finger. Other breaker manufactures the paper clip would burn away. Nice video on the history I really enjoyed it. I did live and work around their products
@JimS870
@JimS870 2 жыл бұрын
I have a 2009 made condo with a Schneider Electric (Federal Pioneer) panel with Stab Lok breakers. Is this one good to go due to its more recent age, or no?
@circuitbreaker9001
@circuitbreaker9001 2 жыл бұрын
@@JimS870 In Ontario there are thousands of these panels still in service. If you are having no issues I would leave it alone. I have some in my place and do not see replacing them. Other manufacture had some issues with their breakers also. So some where bad and most where OK.
@charlesball6519
@charlesball6519 2 жыл бұрын
I remember the house we moved into 1986, brand new, with Square D QO breakers. One day, I was being dumb and thought I could try to power a Yo-yo's lights by plugging it into the outlet. A bright flash and the breaker tripped instantly. A house we moved into, in 1992, before we had it rewired with Square D homeline, had the Federal Pacific breakers (and four fuses in the garage). I was taking apart an old Electrolux vacuum, with it plugged in (because I was trying to get it to work), and accidentally touching the contacts on the motor. Got a little shock, nothing serious, but the breakers didn't trip.
@mattgraham4340
@mattgraham4340 Жыл бұрын
@@charlesball6519 A standard breaker doesn't protect from electrical shock, you need a GFCI to provide some level of shock protection.
@kentrzacherl
@kentrzacherl Жыл бұрын
@@JimS870 the panel should absolutely be replaced. Stab-Loc busbars are flawed by design. Even if newly manufactured/modern breakers actually trip when they're supposed to, the Stab-Loc bus is inferior to modern bus designs.
@ProctorsGamble
@ProctorsGamble 3 жыл бұрын
Federal Pacific. One of the best welders ever made!
@greendryerlint
@greendryerlint 3 жыл бұрын
My parents' house, built in 1963, had a FPE panel. Amazingly we never had a problem with it. There were two breakers that occasionally tripped---we had a crappy above-ground swimming pool and when the filter was running and my dad would decide to use power tools, it would trip the garage circuit. Another kitchen breaker would occasionally trip. Maybe those were the only good ones in the panel.. Once we entered the Internet age, I googled this panel and found all the problems that were being had. When my mom passed away and I remodeled the home and readied it for sale, I had the panel replaced and relocated from the walk-in closet it was in to the garage, as I didn't want the karma of passing along this problem to the next owner. I still have the panel as a souvenir. Even as a kid if I had to reset a breaker I thought they felt pretty shoddy and never liked the way all the handles wouldn't even line up with each other.
@Jaychokshi007
@Jaychokshi007 3 жыл бұрын
This is where 6 sigma manufacturing comes in! For six sigma manufacturing your products should have a failure of 1 in a million failure which is a 0.001% failure. This is what companies target. I work for Square D and I have seen things getting manufactured and tested. I would definitely suggest replace the whole panel!
@pauls1003
@pauls1003 3 жыл бұрын
Uh... 1 in a million is not .001%. You are missing a few zeros...
@Jaychokshi007
@Jaychokshi007 3 жыл бұрын
@@pauls1003 you are correct! I am sorry!
@sgtkurry
@sgtkurry 3 жыл бұрын
It’s also not one in a million it’s 3.4.
@tomcapon4447
@tomcapon4447 3 жыл бұрын
@@pauls1003 1 ppm = 0.0001%, so only missing one zero! 😎
@pauls1003
@pauls1003 3 жыл бұрын
@@tomcapon4447 1/1000000 = .000001
@sivalley
@sivalley 3 жыл бұрын
The thing I hated the most about the stab-loc line is that when pushing in a breaker you WILL accidentally turn that breaker on.
@ivanromo2030
@ivanromo2030 3 жыл бұрын
It’s just so crazy that these panels are STILL intact in most homes and inspectors don’t inform the new home owners that “aye this electrical apparatus is kinda fucked and is a ticking time bomb. Change it own in the near future”
@tarf1a
@tarf1a 3 жыл бұрын
@@ivanromo2030 Most home inspectors haven't got a clue about that. Wasn't covered in the one day class that made them a "home inspector."
@purenupe1
@purenupe1 3 жыл бұрын
@@tarf1a the stab lock breakers and panel identification was part of my 3 month residential inspection course at Triton Community College
@jman0870
@jman0870 3 жыл бұрын
@@ivanromo2030 Most home inspectors are literally idiots. Mine told me my house didn't have a sewer vent. They walked past it 20 times during the inspection. They stuck their receptacle tester in every receptacle, wrote a bunch of idiotic bullshit, and charged me $500. I'll never pay for one again.
@billbogan7377
@billbogan7377 3 жыл бұрын
We covered it in my 4 month inspection class and I always recommend they be replaced asap
@Tipsy652
@Tipsy652 3 жыл бұрын
I’ve replaced a number of federal pacific panels. One of which was still on fire at the time.
@jmb9518
@jmb9518 3 жыл бұрын
Yep
@jesseready5667
@jesseready5667 3 жыл бұрын
Last panel change i did was fpe. The whole stud bay was burned from 40 inches up to the cieling
@jmb9518
@jmb9518 3 жыл бұрын
@@jesseready5667 lucky you got there before they died in a fire...unreal the kind of shit that is out there just a moment away from complete combustion!
@jesseready5667
@jesseready5667 3 жыл бұрын
@@jmb9518 the deadfront contained the arc flash it knocked the pud fuse out whole wall was black. Carpet nearly caught fire.
@jmb9518
@jmb9518 3 жыл бұрын
@Jesse Ready I have pulled outlets where they have had a deep friar or something with a high demand motor or heating element load...or space heater...and has burned the neutral and the blue Carlon box was melted and nothing but ash cover the once white neutral....always check the panel as it usually will burn on that end too...GEs from the late 60s early 70s had major problems too...but not like FPE etc. It is crazy out there some of the things I see.
@kc4cvh
@kc4cvh 3 жыл бұрын
I grew up in a Jim Walters home equipped with a Federal Pacific service panel. I'm glad we survived.
@MrWolfSnack
@MrWolfSnack Жыл бұрын
I actually have an entire Federal Pacific panel and some loose breakers that I bought at the junk store over the years I keep for study. I drilled out rivets on one of the breakers to study their innards. Let's just say that if the dollar store sold these breakers I would believe it. This is likely one of the earliest cases of product fraud on a scale of this size.
@joeschlotthauer840
@joeschlotthauer840 3 жыл бұрын
My mom and dad had the house remodeled in 1968, three months later there was a fire in the attic, the fire department determined it was "electrical", never looked at the breaker box. Almost died from electrocution while wet and plugging in a swimming pool filter. After mom and dad passed, an electrician was stunned to see the Federal Pacific panel and the history behind it...
@ProctorsGamble
@ProctorsGamble 3 жыл бұрын
Must have been a defective panel because it didn’t kill anyone!
@FishFind3000
@FishFind3000 2 жыл бұрын
@Les fire departments always investigate to determine origin on the fire. Btw the NEC National Electric Code book is written by the fire marshals or some other fire department.
@4aneme8R
@4aneme8R 3 жыл бұрын
We had a "Fire Pacific" panel as the local commercial supply house said. I replaced the entire pane with a bypass switch for generator.
@MadLadCustoms
@MadLadCustoms 3 жыл бұрын
I used to do electrical work, and this is the only type of content I'd still watch even through it's no longer part of my money making toolset. Great presentation 🤜🤛
@drchomesolar
@drchomesolar 3 жыл бұрын
Not even in the Electrical Universe, I'm an Appliance Repair guy, but your info helps me daily. I always hear what you say and it reminds me of my father (who was an electrician for 50 years plus). You echo what he states or has taught me over the years. THANK YOU. I'm glad to relearn and hear someone of your level "parrot" what I was taught all those years. Also after watching vids for months now, finally became a 120V member. Keep up the great work. I'll do 480V soon.
@kevincorbett7559
@kevincorbett7559 3 жыл бұрын
Great video. I’m fascinated to learn these breakers continued to be used as late as you've said. By the mid eighties (at least in NYC) the standard joke was “Federal Pacifica? Wire for fire.” We all knew not to touch the damn things and not work in buildings that had FP panels and/or breakers.
@georgeobama-biden8670
@georgeobama-biden8670 3 жыл бұрын
You're seriously awesome brother. I remember subscribing to your channel a few years ago, when you were just getting back to working for another company, and shutting down your own show. These videos have gotten even better, and your views are blowing up. Love to see it. You're a fantastic teacher - i've sent your switch loop video to so many apprentices.
@AmalgmousProxy
@AmalgmousProxy 3 жыл бұрын
I have a Stab-Loc Federal Pacific panel in my house. Never gave me a warm and fuzzy feeling, plan on changing it. I'm just happy I don't have aluminum wire from that era.
@d.e.b.b5788
@d.e.b.b5788 3 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, Federal Pacific breakers and aluminum wiring, what a terrific combination! Then add in the cheap contractors who used 20 amp breakers with lots of 14 gauge Romex wiring, and you have a perfect storm! Yes, my house was one of those.
@LDXReal
@LDXReal Жыл бұрын
Man thank you so much for your videos, not only are they preparing me for my future apprenticeship, but also gaining me connections with people in the industry. Quick storytime: My house was built in the 60s and just today we got it looked at by an electrician... Needless to say this place could've killed us all and we'd have never known 💀 When he was here I heard him talking about Stab Lok and I thought “oh lord we've got a Federal Pacific breaker” so I told him I knew the failure rate was high. I'm pretty young so he was like “yeah that's right, but how do you know?” Thats when told him I was gonna enter the industry and he seemed very pleased. He even told me that I could come and work with him during my apprenticeship. Gotta say this probably wouldn't have happened if I hadn't discovered your channel. Thanks so much for all the free info Dustin; I feel like I'm well on my way to become a journeyman!
@robertm6330
@robertm6330 3 жыл бұрын
Awesome video. I started my electrical career in 1978. So I have seen a lot of Federal Pacific and zinsco. I always do my best to talk to customer into replacing those systems. The cost of those replacement Breakers can sometimes be quadruple the cost of a normal breaker. Went on a remodel with the Federal Pacific equipment I would ground out a circuit on the metal box to show an apprentice just exactly firsthand what's going on. Nothing makes an impression like a live experiment like that. It would also help convince the customer to change it out. Thank you for all your hard work and effort you put into this video I learned a lot about the history of the companies that I didn't know. ROCK ON.
@karlmacrae4878
@karlmacrae4878 3 жыл бұрын
At the risk of repeating a worn out joke we over here in Northern CA say that FPE stands for Fire Producing Equipment!
@ProctorsGamble
@ProctorsGamble 3 жыл бұрын
Fire sPecific
@ironmartysharpe8293
@ironmartysharpe8293 3 жыл бұрын
It's definitely not a joke but a real fact
@tccdlinux1471
@tccdlinux1471 3 жыл бұрын
Great Video! Just sold my 92 year old mothers house built late 50's. I had replaced (I know shame on me) a stab lock panel a while back (Thanks for your great videos). Had to use some J Boxes, so I was nervous, fill calculations (thanks), methods etc, when home inspector walked up popped the dead front and covers off, looked it over took pictures. Thought I was busted, but it PASSED. Then they found an stab lock I didn't know about so the original house panel failed, mine passed. Had to pay an electrician this time, he came replaced panel and everything passed. Really appreciate your constant HARPING ON DOING QUALITY WORK. When I replaced the first stab lock I had never replaced a panel, but tried to follow your examples and do a neat organized panel. Secure wires, grommet through panel, wires organized, bonded properly etc. Next to your work it would look amateurish but much better than typical DIY person. Thanks for the great guidance and motivation. I can really now appreciate your skills and knowledge at doing such high quality work in a timely manner.
@crustycurmudgeon2182
@crustycurmudgeon2182 3 жыл бұрын
We replaced an entire FPE panel at my wife's house a few years ago. She sold the place, we moved into a rental that also has FPE panel. Needed to replace a problem breaker (tripped at less than 80% load), and the Connecticut Electric replacement breaker was $43.00! (Could have ordered one from Lowes for $27.00, but would take a week to arrive). Been well aware of FPE problems for years, so knew what to do. The more generic "Stab-On" breakers, today, cost around $3.00. Used those at a food plant I worked at, never any problems. But FPE "Stab-Lok"? Run like hell...
@wilburpluck3806
@wilburpluck3806 3 жыл бұрын
When we were installing residential services in the early 1960s FPE products were easily 30% cheaper than quality panels, like Bulldog Pushmatic, Bryant, and Westinghouse.
@1912RamblerFan01
@1912RamblerFan01 3 жыл бұрын
If I'm not mistaken, the Bulldog Pushmatic breakers were also problematic.
@wilburpluck3806
@wilburpluck3806 3 жыл бұрын
@@1912RamblerFan01 the old units were quite reliable. The cheaper stuff slide by ITE in the late 1950s and 1960s had problems. ITE also cheapened the lug design in the panel boards. The original 1930s Pushmatic breakers were bolted down to heavy copper lugs, and so there were no problems which would arise from poor lug contacts. I’ve worked in situations where 1930s Pushmatics had been used in switching service for seventy or eighty years without failing.
@ProctorsGamble
@ProctorsGamble 3 жыл бұрын
Don’t forget Wadsworth
@jsparlin1
@jsparlin1 3 жыл бұрын
have used ge for decades, like for price and quality and hd has them
@genemartin6962
@genemartin6962 3 жыл бұрын
That was why they were so popular with volume builders. They could buy in qty from a supply house and with a large enough order get terms discounts and dating on the payment. Helped their cash flow and held the cost of the house down. I would say about 20% of the houses I have bought for rental use have had these panels installed. These are basic 3/1.5 or 3/2 homes. basic design. some brick, some vinyl. I just figure in replacement into the price when I am figuring on buying a house that has one of these in it.
@joeharley87
@joeharley87 2 жыл бұрын
I was in high school taking electrical installation in the early 70s. The teacher took us to the UL Lab in Long Island, where they did do all the testing. It was very interesting to see the way they did do all the testing on all the electric products and appliances.
@lowndslow
@lowndslow 3 жыл бұрын
I’m 3 months into my apprenticeship and I’ve already been told multiple times that if we enter a home with a fire specific panel we are to inform the homeowner that we can’t work on them and they should strongly consider a panel change and we leave.
@mcarroll598
@mcarroll598 3 жыл бұрын
Been in the trade 23 years. Wont even work on it unless I change it out.
@feelingtardy
@feelingtardy 3 жыл бұрын
sounds like you are being trained properly
@taeraresh2115
@taeraresh2115 3 жыл бұрын
Good policy. From what I can tell, if you touch it, you're now responsible for it, even if you haven't actually done anything. Safer to walk away if you can't replace the whole thing.
@AKSoapy29
@AKSoapy29 3 жыл бұрын
"Don't try and upsell me things I don't need, just fix the problem" applies here.
@doncooperjr4817
@doncooperjr4817 3 жыл бұрын
@@AKSoapy29 nope. If the customer says that, move along abd let someone else address that nightmare. It's not the customers fault, but I cannot afford a second home because the customer doesn't trust me. It's my license, you cannot force me to do something. I can't force you to spend money and you can't force me to do work. Done and done. There's a reason the panel's are called Fire Prone Equipment.
@bradc7767
@bradc7767 3 жыл бұрын
I refuse to do any installations in a home with FPE. I've at times reported really bad panels to the local jurisdiction having authority. The landlords don't appreciate it, but I'd rather lose a customer than someone else lose their life..
@aidanray4846
@aidanray4846 3 жыл бұрын
In Missouri when I go to pull permits for jobs we have to replace FPE if they have it. It’s the new normal
@rogerdaly7622
@rogerdaly7622 3 жыл бұрын
AHJ - Authority having Jurisdiction
@ironmartysharpe8293
@ironmartysharpe8293 3 жыл бұрын
I too refuse to do any electrical work that has a federal Pacific panel because of the liability , because if a fire started due to an electrical failure I could easily get the blame for it , Even though it was not my fault , Not to mention the cost to hire a lawyer to clear my name , I definitely point out to the customer of how dangerous Federal Pacific panels are and they must be replaced immediately because with these panels They don't have any electrical protection Federal Pacific breakers are merely on off switches and in actuality , With many independent tests , it turns out that the failure rate is 80 percent and up
@1121494
@1121494 3 жыл бұрын
@@ironmartysharpe8293 Why should you be left with the lawyer costs to clear your name if you were to be unfairly blamed? This is why the american system of legal costs of each covering his own is dumb compared to the british way.
@staberdearth3130
@staberdearth3130 2 жыл бұрын
Landlords would be complaining even more if you had not mentioned the danger of FedPac panels and they had one of their properties burn to the ground with potential injuries and deaths. You’d highly likely be subpoenaed and asked WHY did you fail to pick this up as a qualified electrician. To protect yourself establish a paper trail with the landlord that you did indeed warn them of your findings and recommendations.
@aaperry1
@aaperry1 Жыл бұрын
Hey Dustin, I'm answering your question about outgoing failure rates. My first job in 1988 was a SRAM product engineer for Cypress Semiconductor in San Jose, CA where all manufacturing was done on site. Failure rates were measured in part-per-million or ppm. If memory serves correctly, the goal was to have an outgoing failure rate of under 100 ppm, which is 1 in 10,000 or .01%. Love your channel - please keep up the excellent work!
@marcosmota1094
@marcosmota1094 Жыл бұрын
Dude, I recommend you and click your recommended videos. You have a ton of notoriety on the socials. You're doing good work and getting people paid.
@scottrunnels3958
@scottrunnels3958 Жыл бұрын
I just discovered I have one of these boxes, been living here for 6 years in a mobile home. I haven't ever had a problem,breakers have tripped before when we were figuring out what plugs were on what line. But after listening to you very informative by the way I'm going to look into replacing the whole system !! Don't want my home to go up in smoke !!Thank you for posting this great Information !! I'm subscribing now !!
@bentorres800
@bentorres800 3 жыл бұрын
Just started my Apprenticeship with 2 different electrical contractors. Your the freakin man Dustin! Your videos have been helping me out TREMENDOUSLY
@danvanf
@danvanf 3 жыл бұрын
I saw a huge SK screwdriver get burned in half when it accidentally shorted a 50 amp FPE protected circuit. The shaft was around an inch thick it dropped through an open hole in a sub-panel. Then burnt into two pieces in well under 15 seconds. But, of course, there was also a 100 amp main breaker. Neither one blew, but the lights dimmed in the house enough to alert them to check on me.
@kc8ncr
@kc8ncr Жыл бұрын
I replaced the one in a piece of property I own and was really appreciated the confirmation from an expert. Thanks Dustin.
@mikequenzer9100
@mikequenzer9100 3 жыл бұрын
wow, about 5 years ago we were looking at a house to buy, but the realtor stated the buyer would have to replace the main panel to purchase because the panel was prone to fire....needless to say we didn't even think of buying the house, and this was the panel that was in place! Think I'm going to like your channel!
@jimanderson4495
@jimanderson4495 3 жыл бұрын
I know these take a lot of time to produce and I appreciate that. THANKS
@jamestroy9625
@jamestroy9625 3 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for your time and knowledge. I did research on FPS because a friend of mine had fp in his home. After showing him my research on this panel and breakers it didn’t take long before I had his panel and breakers replaced. We all feel much safer now. I did a 20amp short out on this fp did NOT trip.
@lawrencelile
@lawrencelile 3 жыл бұрын
Every electrician knows this! I was involved in testing 50fed pak breakers in a lab. 50% wouldn't trip at 100% overcurrent! Death traps!
@fordharley37
@fordharley37 3 жыл бұрын
Having this information is a huge plus especially when we come up on this situation now we have this information to provide to the customer. Appreciate you Dustin. Appreciate the down to earth useful information you constantly provide. I always share your videos to help educate my crew. Thanks 😊
@earthelectricinc.154
@earthelectricinc.154 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely the best explanation I have heard regarding FPE panels and its timeline history. I am wondering where you acquired all that information and research. You have caught my attention and I am now a subscriber. I’d like to add a comment saying, ‘these panels deliver power just fine, they just do not Fail Safely’. So if you have one in your home do not reason that you’ve never had a problem with it. Because the day there’s a short circuit, ground fault, or overload you could potentially have a fire starter.
@lawrencelile
@lawrencelile 3 жыл бұрын
"They just kept makin' the fuckin' breakers!"
@donmclean1220
@donmclean1220 3 жыл бұрын
I owned a house built in 1980 with a zinsco panel installed in a hallway closet. I knew nothing about them until a friend who was an electrician educated me about them. I never had a problem with that panel but it did make me worry . After I no longer owned the house, ironically, it did burn up, but the cause was PGE starting the Camp fire which destroyed Paradise, California. 😖
@jsb7546
@jsb7546 Жыл бұрын
Man you probably wont see this comment but I gotta say the little things like with the into are awesome. I love all the edits you put in your videos it shows how much time and effort you take on them. Keep it up man love from the local exterminator, watching your videos helps me learn a little bit about my electrical system. Don't let the bed bugs bite and let me know if they do I would be glad to drive down to Texas and help you. Thanks much.
@chrishorbatt3504
@chrishorbatt3504 3 жыл бұрын
My dad worked for Jersey Central power company in the 60's and 70's and called them "Federal no -trip"
@randacnam7321
@randacnam7321 3 жыл бұрын
FPE Nevertrip/Nev-R-Trip are other common and applicable names.
@johnkulpowich5260
@johnkulpowich5260 3 жыл бұрын
One of your best shows. Thanks for keeping this info out there
@MrBanzoid
@MrBanzoid 3 жыл бұрын
Hello from the UK. Great channel, I love your collection of old instruments.
@taeraresh2115
@taeraresh2115 3 жыл бұрын
Great video, and I'm glad to see Dr. Aronstein mentioned. I should find the catastrophically failed Zinsco main breaker I have, and send it to your for your video on them. My dad was an electrician who specialized in FPE replacements for a while (lots of them installed our area). He thought that a lot of these panels were installed because they were so physically compact, and could fit in the space that used to have a fusebox without needing major framing work. Also, in addition to all the failures with the breakers themselves, the bus design was extremely poor. Depending on what breakers were installed, you could have upwards of *100 amps flowing through a single 8-32 screw*.
@victordante1866
@victordante1866 3 жыл бұрын
What’s up Dustin, been wondering when you’re gonna put out more “Schematic” type vids where you explain the wiring processes of different equipment and what not. Those are really informative and I’ve gained a lot of knowledge watching them. Keep doing what you do brotha
@JaimeJakubczak
@JaimeJakubczak Ай бұрын
Dustin, just watch your video on FPE panels. I really enjoyed it. It was a little long but the content was all there and very important. I am a retired 21 general contractor, I was a building inspector for just over 5 yrs and a home inspector also for just over 5 yrs. My knowledge of electrical was somewhat limited. Even though my father was an electrical contractors in the 50's and 60's. So your video gave me a lot a insight and much more understanding of the FPE failures. I was aware of them but was very nice to know the history as well. I also know that there are other panel manufacturers with issues, ie Zinsco, Bulldog, Challenger etc. I also like your demeaner, ( cuss words, etc. spoken like a true contractor! lol). I can tell that you are passionate in what you do. Which is rare today. So, thank you for this video. I hope others will gleam from this knowledge that will make them safe!
@1912RamblerFan01
@1912RamblerFan01 3 жыл бұрын
I lived in a house with a Stab-Loc breaker panel... it's always scary to hear about their troubles. My university also had TONS of old FPE switchgear and breaker panels located throughout the campus, all of which should be taken out and replaced. Also, I believe I read somewhere that UL (or someone else) actually did a test of the breakers. But FPE had them rigged to a remote control system where someone would trip the breaker manually if it didn't trip on it's own. They were a really shady business...
@Pharaohscrown
@Pharaohscrown 3 жыл бұрын
Glad to see you're back making videos again Dustin
@larrycrawford9617
@larrycrawford9617 3 жыл бұрын
When I bought my house in 2000 my building inspector told me I should replace my panel because it was no good federal Pacific .my father-in-law was able to track down a couple of breakers for me when he went to Canada because I could not find them anywhere near where I lived. I ended up replacing my panel.
@mattmccaffrey4299
@mattmccaffrey4299 3 жыл бұрын
Very educational and informative - Thank You.
@garychlastawa8277
@garychlastawa8277 3 жыл бұрын
Bought a 3 unit property with one of these panels. My real estate agent pointed it out right away as well as the home inspector and the insurance inspector. Everyone seemed very aware of this issue out here in Massachusetts. We did replace the whole panel.
@lsantana954
@lsantana954 2 жыл бұрын
so glad i came across this video. My home has one of these panels and i'm in the process of pulling a permit to replace the panel. Its still going to be several months by the time the electrical company and the city will come to my home and disconnect the service to get the work done. I was not aware companies made replacement breakers.
@jeffnagafuji5629
@jeffnagafuji5629 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. We had a FPE panel and had it fail. Was left with a service panel full of copper bbbs and a down power line.
@rayjackson4547
@rayjackson4547 2 жыл бұрын
Another good explanation of FPC panels. As a home inspector I instruct my staff not to remove the panel covers. The breakers are also very loose on the buss bar. We just tell clients to replace the panels. If any body resist the advice I tell them to just GOOGLE it. Once they read the nightmares they replace them. Thanks again OK, time to turn the hat around?
@BobBasshead
@BobBasshead 3 жыл бұрын
Great presentation, very informative. 1960 my parents bought a brand new house in Brick Town NJ. It was your typical tract house, 3 bedroom ranch and had the dreaded FP breaker panel. No 220 circuits in the house, natural gas heat, clothes drier and stove, no central AC. I do recall some of the breakers tripping. What was really scary was that the wall receptacles had no ground lug, one day my uncle came over and replaced every single receptacle in the house that has a ground prong. Luckily my parents sold the house in 1971 and wasn't required to update the breaker panel.
@lucash1980
@lucash1980 3 жыл бұрын
I had an uncle like that. He replaced the ungrounded outlets receptacles with outlets that had a ground...but no ground wire. It was safer just to leave them be.
@timmack2415
@timmack2415 3 жыл бұрын
There were LOTS of FP's in the NY/NJ metro area. I can't even count how many I replaced.
@ottoroth9377
@ottoroth9377 3 жыл бұрын
I've had issues with GE Home circuit breakers not tripping, especially with the split bus style where all the 15 and 20 amp circuits were controlled by one 60 amp breaker cut off, where the 240 volt 30 amp and up were not on a main breaker...anyway, I accidently grounded out a 20 amp circuit and went to the panel...did not notice any breaker tripped. This panel was put into my new home back in 1981. I went out and decided to replace the breakers with newer ones, but the cost was almost the cost of a new panel so I bought a Square D and re-did the entire panel. Old GE was scrapped! Good info Brotha!
@elgavilan2000
@elgavilan2000 3 жыл бұрын
Back when I worked in a shop for an equipment reseller, we had over current testing machines that we would use for testing circuit breakers. We also had tons of fire pacific - I mean federal pacific - breakers in our warehouse. We used to take them into the shop, hook them up to the overcurrent testers and watch them burn up for fun. Scary to think of just how many of these were in people’s homes and how many are still in service.
@elc2k385
@elc2k385 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video, Dustin. Your speech, body language, positive energy, the research you have done, it's all very impressive.
@karolszafran1611
@karolszafran1611 3 жыл бұрын
Perfectly worded
@glenjamindle
@glenjamindle 3 жыл бұрын
I bet he couldn't speak without his hands 😂🤣
@j.afranco4760
@j.afranco4760 3 жыл бұрын
I was actually changing outlets here in Brooklyn today and the insulation of the wire got nicked in the metal box and it caused a short and the breaker did not trip. The wire burned through 😳. Good old Federal Pacific
@mattrob15
@mattrob15 3 жыл бұрын
That could also be a grounding issue, could it not?
@tomhughes4980
@tomhughes4980 3 жыл бұрын
I had the same issue, I assumed that the breaker tripped and continued to work on it until it told me it was still hot, lol.
@benm3266
@benm3266 3 жыл бұрын
The last time I encountered a FPE panel was on a call about loss of power in someone's bedroom. Turns out the circuit had been overloaded at some point and melted the wire feeding it because the breaker didn't trip..luckily their house didn't burn down
@ProctorsGamble
@ProctorsGamble 3 жыл бұрын
I have seen transformers trip before an FP breaker would
@GI-JOEs
@GI-JOEs 9 ай бұрын
Thank you i was just aware that i had a FP Panel. I am getting it completely replaced along with a new transfer switch. Good to know 👍
@al2207
@al2207 3 жыл бұрын
in addition FPE had a 600V industrial panel and breaker line , and when CSA started to test breakers it was found they cannot pass the test so that line was scrap all together
@al2207
@al2207 3 жыл бұрын
@@mike60510 sorry , i think the failure occur with CSA interrupting capacity test certification
@MicahFunk
@MicahFunk Жыл бұрын
Just replaced two Challenger panels for a customer and there was even breakers sizzling at times. They were VERY hesitant to replace the panels but they finally decided to do it as long as there wouldn't be any AFCIs installed.
@domb2NY
@domb2NY 3 жыл бұрын
I recently bought a house with an FPE panel. The inspector noted it. I'm glad to say it was replaced a month ago.
@randyscott990
@randyscott990 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video. You mentioned Reliant Electric in the video. The actual name of the company was Reliance Electric, my father worked for Reliance for 40 years. Many years ago my father told me about the rigged test panel the Reliance engineers discovered and opened a whole can of worms. Also, I’m not positive but I think it was Rockwell Automation not Exxon that bought the product line, but, as often as companies are bought and sold Exxon may have owned them at one point.
@paulrozinski1488
@paulrozinski1488 3 жыл бұрын
Great history lesson. All that I’ve ever heard about FPE is “ stay away”. Well done video👍, thanks .
@Bluecollarrebel
@Bluecollarrebel 3 жыл бұрын
Wow 😮 New Subscriber
@scottpelka1211
@scottpelka1211 3 жыл бұрын
I replaced my federal panel in my last house after living there for 5 years... after having 4 breakers go bad I got fed up and replaced the panel with a square d panel. Never had an issue afterwords.
@tarf1a
@tarf1a 3 жыл бұрын
Did the same thing to a house I has purchased "as-is". It too had an FPE and went right into the dumper. A Square D Q0 panel please!
@joshmogg
@joshmogg 3 жыл бұрын
This is interesting. I'm a First Year Apprentice working primarily in service. I would say that the majority of panels/shut off's that we work on are Federal Pioneer. It's a running joke as to how long it will take for the breaker to trip when you're shorting a circuit to find the breaker on a Federal. They're garbage, but remarkably common in Canada.
@warrennetherton6011
@warrennetherton6011 Жыл бұрын
Nice video, very informative. You just stopped me from making a huge mistake with a salvaged Federal Pacific breaker box! Thanks. !
@Peteeymhh
@Peteeymhh 6 ай бұрын
Might sound a little corny but your videos have helped me understand how USA power works for home to light commercial settings. Like abstractly I knew positive negative, shock hazards, AWG wire sizes, rewiring plugs or receptacles. Why I still carry all that caution and respect for electricity but am more at ease understanding these concepts. Thankyou
@chromelemon
@chromelemon 3 жыл бұрын
Sounds like Project Farm should test the Connecticut Electric breakers.
@prjndigo
@prjndigo 3 жыл бұрын
I think you missed that the UL category requires that the equipment have a 100% fail-safe condition of failure and that the _other_ problem that FPE boxes are known for is bus incineration.
@atastro8723
@atastro8723 3 жыл бұрын
I’ve seen this myself, good call!!
@joecummings1260
@joecummings1260 3 жыл бұрын
To tell you the truth, I've been doing this a long time and knew that the Federal Pacific panels were junk, but I didn't know about the failure to trip, I always thought they were dangerous because of loose connections to the buss
@Edward-wr4dk
@Edward-wr4dk 3 жыл бұрын
In the process of buying a house in 2014, the house was built in1955. Fortunately, our Real Estate Agent pointed out the Federal Pacific Panel, I did a little research to verify the issue which gave us the needed leverage to negotiate a lower price to cover the cost of the panel replacement. I had a licensed electrician install the new service while I did many of the branch circuits myself. Before the new panel installation, I accidentally had a dead short on a 15amp circuit. The Federal Pacific breaker did not trip, even after some wire nuts were melted. I ended up tearing out and replacing most of the wiring in the house, previous owners had done some pretty shoddy hook-ups with no regard for wire colors.
@KevinCoop1
@KevinCoop1 2 жыл бұрын
You are very correct. Back in 83 when I started as an electrical draftsman, FPE was bidding to our company but we wouldn’t buy them to install. Stab-loc was a bad design from the beginning. Dustin, Breakers are only guaranteed to trip once in short circuit. You should never direct short a breaker to test it and leave it in service. You may have damaged them. This is why I like fuses way better for feeders in commercial/industrial work. Safer. Also, back at the same time(early 80’s) Romex (NM cable) was being sent out with a big flaw. The bare copper conductors were being connected together with a ridge. Then it was run through the insulation machine and would jam. They would open it to clear the jam by sliding it forward about a foot. If it was a white and used as neutral, you would never find it to be a problem. In black, it was a problem. Electricians found (3) of them, and I found one in my house when I built it. They would direct short to the ground in the cable(maybe)!
@prjndigo
@prjndigo 3 жыл бұрын
Can verify, had a 90A 240v disabled-on by a cockroach at the appliance fuse in a compact electric furnace. When we pulled the box and replaced it with a [D] all the bus contacts were corroded. Keep in mind that "60% were faulty" means that about 80% of the dual-throw were faulty and that the disconnect in the box was ONLY a disconnect... had to hit mine with a sledge to throw it. Upside, the electrician my FIL knew was the guy who put the roof of that trailer together when he was 19.
@John-ru5ud
@John-ru5ud 3 жыл бұрын
"Quality control" was an oxymoron in the 1970s. I believe that about 20% of new cars had to be pushed off the end of the assembly line because parts had not been installed.
@johndarby795
@johndarby795 2 жыл бұрын
My Dad was good friends with a guy who owned the local Chrysler dealership. When I was about 12 years old, I was with him when he went to the dealership and the owner showed us a brand new Barracuda, I believe it was, where the trunk lid was misaligned with the fender by almost an inch. The dealership owner complained that his body shop had to partially rebuild many of the new cars they received. This isn't a slam on Chrysler, I'm pretty certain the same thing happened at other manufacturers as well in the 1960s and 70s.
@thomasschwarting5108
@thomasschwarting5108 3 жыл бұрын
Extremely informative thank you. I've had personal experience with these breakers too and told horror stories as well.
@sixoffive
@sixoffive 2 жыл бұрын
I have one. It’s on a pole with the meter. From there to the box on my house. Couple years ago we started having problems, finally got an electrician to come over. Nice guy, looks at the box on my house, it’s fine. We go to the pole and starts telling me his insurance does not cover him working on a FPE box. He will not touch it. But he was nice enough to look at it and tell me what was wrong and how to fix it short of swapping out the box but recommended replacing the box. He also recommended pulling the meter instead of trusting the main breaker. The common lug was corroded and burnt, moved common to the other one. He also said to reset (it only has the main breaker) main once a month until I replace the box. Nice
@MrENT18
@MrENT18 3 жыл бұрын
Cant wait to see the others in this series
@andrewsandefur7715
@andrewsandefur7715 3 жыл бұрын
Rad video as always. Lots of good info here, really looking forward to the others coming on the old junk. I think it would be rather interesting to see testing on the failure rates and maybe doing the same test with modern breakers we use.
@mcarroll598
@mcarroll598 3 жыл бұрын
Old timer told me when I was an apprentice. Another problem with these panels is the trim screw in the middle of some the panels. Suppose to adjust that so the breakers fit tight against the cover. A lot of times it isn’t adjusted and makes a bad connection, as well as a faulty breaker.
@leewillelectrical5413
@leewillelectrical5413 3 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for helping me with your videos👍🏼
@jman0870
@jman0870 3 жыл бұрын
My parents had a Federal Pacific panel. I told them over and over to get it replaced. One day the electric stove direct shorted, blew the plug off the back of it, spewed black smoke everywhere, and filled the drywall behind it with molten metal. The breaker never tripped. I never really tried to figure out exactly what happened, but I suspect the whip got loose (my mother pulled the stove out several times per year to clean behind it), overheated, and shorted. It took almost burning the house down for my parents to get a new panel. My father still doesn't believe me when I try to give advice on HVAC/Electrical haha.
@HillbillyRednecking
@HillbillyRednecking 3 жыл бұрын
From what I understand is that their test bench had a way to manually trip the breaker even if the breaker wouldn’t trip its self, so the test was guaranteed to trip the breaker every time!
@ironmartysharpe8293
@ironmartysharpe8293 3 жыл бұрын
That's correct , Federal Pacific had set up a remote control to make the breakers trip when the inspectors arrived to fool them that they worked perfectly in which they didn't work at all
@WalterKnox
@WalterKnox 2 жыл бұрын
@@ironmartysharpe8293 i would love to have seen that bench
@mbnr26
@mbnr26 3 жыл бұрын
this video was definitely interesting you did a lot of research for this one. I was thinking of doing a test set up as I have tons of bolt on federal pioneer breakers. would be wayyyy cooler if you did it though
@SNUFFY1989
@SNUFFY1989 3 жыл бұрын
I have federal pacific in my house with knob and tube wiring... Everything trips the breakers, it's coming out real soon.... Love the video man, appreciate everything you do and the time you take out of your day for all of us here
@garbo8962
@garbo8962 3 жыл бұрын
Hope you have great fire insurance inter connected smoke alarms and a sprinkler system
@lucash1980
@lucash1980 3 жыл бұрын
The downside to knob and tube is the lack of ground wire and all the janky splices people made. The old stuff was heavy duty wire with porcelain insulators and soldered connections. If your breakers are tripping and the lights go out, that's a good thing. The breaker works.
@blueskies4715
@blueskies4715 3 жыл бұрын
Dustin, the material cost to replace every breaker versus the entire panel box (to say Square D HO or QO), just the Connecticut Electric breakers are about twice as expensive and then you'd still have the old panel box with old technology. I guess this might be an approach like you say, for individual circuits, but not a whole box solution. TRECS Certified Inspectors wont even look beyond the FPE or Zinsco sticker any more, just recommend having a licensed electrician review it, and they 'strongly' recommend replacement. Thanks for the history! I always thought they just went bankrupt. Great rundown on UL and a basic understanding of manufacturing processes. I look forward to your Zinsco breakdown!
@garyandrews3925
@garyandrews3925 3 жыл бұрын
I had one in my current house. The first project I did was a new service and a panel change to a SQD QO 200A. FP has burned down more houses than careless smoking.
@nics-systems-electric
@nics-systems-electric 3 жыл бұрын
This stuff is amazing looking forward to seeing the other brands
@masonoliver8818
@masonoliver8818 3 жыл бұрын
Just changed out my parents fed pac Panel a couple months ago. Thing was the original from the 70s and had 6 total breakers, 220s included, powering the entire 1k Sq ft house. These things rarely tripped, we had to put 2 window acs, a laser cutter, and lots of normal items on a circuit to get it to trip
@Hexatomb
@Hexatomb 3 жыл бұрын
I had to have my whole panel/breakers replaced recently when an electrician said he wasn't allowed to do any work on the federal pacific panel due to liability. $800 ugh.
@bryanstevens5901
@bryanstevens5901 3 жыл бұрын
Cheaper than a funeral and house.
@rp573
@rp573 3 жыл бұрын
$800 is incredibly cheap. That’s a $2500 job all day long
@tomtom7955
@tomtom7955 3 жыл бұрын
you got off cheap was the guy your buddy or something?
@Hexatomb
@Hexatomb 3 жыл бұрын
Hmm. Panel was for my condo, maybe I got lucky with the quote or the guy was just looking for the work.
@treeguyable
@treeguyable 3 жыл бұрын
Bought my 1963 built house in 1983 with 100 amp, FP fuse box, no ground, cloth covered wires. Was so glad to gut the house in 91 or so, and put all new wiring, from the meter in, and a 200 amp breaker box.
@f3wbs
@f3wbs 3 жыл бұрын
Dustin! Good vid as always.
@HamiltonMechanical
@HamiltonMechanical 3 жыл бұрын
Removed another one from existence today! (later update) removed yet another one today, that's two in the last month. This one had a breaker that failed to trip, outlet shorted from being loose, and was still live when I pulled it. It never tripped. glad to get that one out of service!
@joeyager8479
@joeyager8479 3 жыл бұрын
After my dad passed, mom bought a smaller house built in 1960 it had FPE breaker equipment. I'm not an electrician by training, but I knew enough to know that I would not want this. Not only were the breakers bad, the boxes were way too small and everything was jammed together - it was dangerous to work on. Also, it had 4 "Mains", so you were never really sure what circuits were live or dead when one of the mains was tripped. For safety, I used to trip them all when I had to get into the panel. One final note to Electric U: It was RELIANCE (not "Reliant") Electric that bought the previous owner. I know this because I was working at the former Haughton Elevator, Div, of Reliance Electric at the time. The whole deal was later bought out by Exxon as you noted.
@bmay8818
@bmay8818 3 жыл бұрын
My (awful) ex was an indoor grower, renting a house. It had a FPE panel. Yeah, bad combination. She hired a traffic engineer with a drug problem to wire her 15kW of lights, which he did by daisy-chaining each outlet off of the one before it. With 14 guage solid. I eventually fixed that. Ironically, the problem with a breaker came when I used my welder and it should have tripped the breaker but didn't. That's when I read up on these panels. Same ex hired the same idiot to install a mini-split. With (water) plumbing tubing and fittings. He did at least use liquid tight flex for the power to the outdoor unit...except he ran out so the wire was exposed for the last foot. He also used his leg to hold a board he was cutting with a circular saw, and YES, he did end up in the hospital shortly thereafter with a pretty sizable cut. Don't date selfish idiots who hire other idiots. And don't trust FPE panels.
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