I have a scenario where the Circuit Breakers for a Dryer and a Range are intertwined in the CB panel. In the picture below 17 and 20 are ganged together with that wild ganging clip. 18 and 19 both 30amps are ganged together normally.
- Is this kind of ganging of breakers with in code ?
- Why would anyone do this ?
- Why wouldn't they just connect this normally 17 & 18 and then 19 & 20?
EDIT 7-11-2018
Based on write ups and comments etc.. I felt it better to edit my post rather than to go through each write-up/comment.
Please don't read anything into the numbering of spaces, I was told the previous homeowner did that numbering.
- 17 & 20 Range........40 Amp Range.
- 18 & 19 Dryer..........30 Amp Dryer.
- 1 & 2, 3 & 4.............60 Amp Heater.
- 5 & 6, 7 & 8.............30 Amp Air Conditioner.
- 21 & 22, 23 & 24.....30 Amp Water Heater.
I know each pole is 120V circuit. I know that you gang them in a 240V circuit (L1,L2) - in a residence in USA you don't normally get 220V Single Phase (HI-Leg or Stinger Leg - of course they all sting if you ask me).
So each pole Odd/Even slot - A & B Phase if you will (L1, L2). Normally Odd (1, 3, 5 etc) is L1 and Even (2,4,6 etc) is L2 (of course I don't think code states which is L1 and which is L2). That way when you place a 240V breaker in; it takes up the Odd Slot {120V - L1} and the Even Slot {120V - L2} for 240V. This might be panel dependent but that is the jist of getting 240V from L1 and L2.
As for the breaker in question I do believe it is a Quad as some have linked to. Which basically sounds like 2 Double Stuffs in one unit , in order to fit the number of breakers that are needed. Seems to me the Builder did not size the panel correctly and just Stuffed away.