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Chris O
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isherwood
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Can a fuse panel supporting knob-and-tube wiring be replaced without a new feed or updated circuits?

Home built before 1910. It is a 3-story structure with plaster walls and some BxBX, some romexcable and a lot of knob and tube. In the hallway on the second floor is a fuse panel for that floor and some of the overhead lights on the 1st floor.

enter image description here

My question: isIs it possible to replace the fuse panel with a breaker panel WITHOUTwithout running a new feed from the basement and WITHOUTwithout replacing the K+T throughout the second floor?

I recognize most will say the RIGHT WAYright way to do it is to gut the entire house (walls, ceilings) and rewire - but I see that as being prohibitively expensive and a monumental undertaking. Is it best to leave it as is - or would it be improved (from a safety perspective) if a breaker panel could be retrofit?

enter image description here

Can a fuse panel be replaced?

Home built before 1910. It is a 3-story structure with plaster walls and some Bx, some romex and a lot of knob and tube. In the hallway on the second floor is a fuse panel for that floor and some of the overhead lights on the 1st floor.

enter image description here

My question: is it possible to replace the fuse panel with a breaker panel WITHOUT running a new feed from the basement and WITHOUT replacing the K+T throughout the second floor?

I recognize most will say the RIGHT WAY to do it is to gut the entire house (walls, ceilings) and rewire - but I see that as being prohibitively expensive and a monumental undertaking. Is it best to leave it as is - or would it be improved (from a safety perspective) if a breaker panel could be retrofit?

Can a fuse panel supporting knob-and-tube wiring be replaced without a new feed or updated circuits?

Home built before 1910. It is a 3-story structure with plaster walls and some BX, some cable and a lot of knob and tube. In the hallway on the second floor is a fuse panel for that floor and some of the overhead lights on the 1st floor.

Is it possible to replace the fuse panel with a breaker panel without running a new feed from the basement and without replacing the K+T throughout the second floor?

I recognize most will say the right way to do it is to gut the entire house (walls, ceilings) and rewire - but I see that as being prohibitively expensive and a monumental undertaking. Is it best to leave it as is - or would it be improved (from a safety perspective) if a breaker panel could be retrofit?

enter image description here

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FreeMan
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Home built before 1910. It is a 3-story structure with plaster walls and some Bx, some romex and a lot of knob and tube. In the hallway on the second floor is a fuse panel for that enter image description herefloorfloor and some of the overhead lights on the 1st floor. Photo attached.

Question is…enter image description here

My question: is it possible to replace the fuse panel with a breaker panel WITHOUT running a new feed from the basement and WITHOUT replacing the K+T throughout the second floor? I

I recognize most will say the RIGHT WAY to do it is to gut the entire house (walls, ceilings) and rewire - but I see that as being prohibitively expensive and a monumental undertaking. Is it best to leave it as is - or would it be improved (from a safety perspective) if a breaker panel could be retrofit?

Home built before 1910. It is a 3-story structure with plaster walls and some Bx, some romex and a lot of knob and tube. In the hallway on the second floor is a fuse panel for that enter image description herefloor and some of the overhead lights on the 1st floor. Photo attached.

Question is… is it possible to replace the fuse panel with a breaker panel WITHOUT running a new feed from the basement and WITHOUT replacing the K+T throughout the second floor? I recognize most will say the RIGHT WAY to do it is to gut the entire house (walls, ceilings) and rewire - but I see that as being prohibitively expensive and a monumental undertaking. Is it best to leave it as is - or would it be improved (from a safety perspective) if a breaker panel could be retrofit?

Home built before 1910. It is a 3-story structure with plaster walls and some Bx, some romex and a lot of knob and tube. In the hallway on the second floor is a fuse panel for that floor and some of the overhead lights on the 1st floor.

enter image description here

My question: is it possible to replace the fuse panel with a breaker panel WITHOUT running a new feed from the basement and WITHOUT replacing the K+T throughout the second floor?

I recognize most will say the RIGHT WAY to do it is to gut the entire house (walls, ceilings) and rewire - but I see that as being prohibitively expensive and a monumental undertaking. Is it best to leave it as is - or would it be improved (from a safety perspective) if a breaker panel could be retrofit?

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nobody
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