Hi all I'm relatively new here but have gotten my feet wet posting a few times. I'm an BSEE/MSECE but not an electrician. I'm not at all convinced I want to even do this work myself (the actual grid connect in the main panel); my main concern is not having a big unaccounted for cost item.
I'm looking to install a 240V Grid Tie Solar system on a large 30'x45' shop detached but 6' from the east side of the attached garage/house. The main panel is mounted on the side of the garage so I'm expecting to drop conduit from the shop roof and bury it to get over to the inverters which will be mounted near the main panel on the side of the garage. It is no more than 30' linear run of wire from the shop roof, to the ground across the walkway and popping back up next to the main panel. Everything else is already buried in this area.
Main Panel: The main panel is very old dating back to 1976 (I wonder what that makes me
) but the electrical seems to have been upgraded when the shop was put in around 2000. The main panel is right next to the meter and is being fed with 4/0 aluminum wire. It seems to be a GE unit but no model number that I can see and the paper labels are unreadable.
Shop Sub-Panel: There is a 240V/125 Amp subpanel in the shop operating of of a ganged pair of 100 amp breaker in the main panel(4 awg wire) but at the moment this seems to bear little impact to the solar connect to the grid (i.e. main panel).
I have some fairly specific questions, but first some basic parameters for the solar.
Looking to install 36 panels at nominal 10 Kwatts and from what I have read with virtually zero blockage (other than clouds) the SMA Sunny Boy would be a good inexpensive choice.
Based on installation descriptions, If I can get away with one higher capacity inverter (like a SB10K v.s. two SB5K) I can avoid a lot of duplicate DC and AC cut-offs and associated conduit. In addition there seems to be limited open breaker slots in the main panel. I think there is enough room for a double breaker.
So it seems I need a pair of 50 amp breakers to tie-in the SMA 240 inverter. I have two open slots in the Main panel but they are not located together. Here is a picture of the beast. I buzzed across a pair of open (but not adjoining) slots and the two open ones have 240V across them.

Question #1 Is it a relatively simple matter to reorganize the breakers to get a pair of 240V breakers grouped at the bottom of the fuse box?
There is an existing open double at the bottom left with a 15 and 20 amp circuit breakers just above. The 15 and 20 could be moved to two other open slots without regard to phase provide the wire is long enough to support it which it seems it is as everything still stay on the lower portion of the panel.
Question #2 Where is the main breaker? Neither the Main or the subpanel have what I recognize as a Main breaker(my last house had one in Ca and I think they seemed to be common place there). There is a locked box coming out of the ground at the foot of the driveway. I assume this is power as all the other utilities are represented in one way or another outside of this box.
Follow up to Question #2a
In the absence of a main breaker and the secret lock on the street I'm assuming that the power company has to be called in to switch off the mains inside of that little box.
Follow up to Question #2b
Is it possible to put in a AC disconnect inside of the main panel? The meter and the main panel are separated by little more than 3" of 2" conduit. Basically I'm asking as rewiring the service connection between the meter and the main panel is probably non trivial.
TIA.
I'm looking to install a 240V Grid Tie Solar system on a large 30'x45' shop detached but 6' from the east side of the attached garage/house. The main panel is mounted on the side of the garage so I'm expecting to drop conduit from the shop roof and bury it to get over to the inverters which will be mounted near the main panel on the side of the garage. It is no more than 30' linear run of wire from the shop roof, to the ground across the walkway and popping back up next to the main panel. Everything else is already buried in this area.
Main Panel: The main panel is very old dating back to 1976 (I wonder what that makes me

Shop Sub-Panel: There is a 240V/125 Amp subpanel in the shop operating of of a ganged pair of 100 amp breaker in the main panel(4 awg wire) but at the moment this seems to bear little impact to the solar connect to the grid (i.e. main panel).
I have some fairly specific questions, but first some basic parameters for the solar.
Looking to install 36 panels at nominal 10 Kwatts and from what I have read with virtually zero blockage (other than clouds) the SMA Sunny Boy would be a good inexpensive choice.
Based on installation descriptions, If I can get away with one higher capacity inverter (like a SB10K v.s. two SB5K) I can avoid a lot of duplicate DC and AC cut-offs and associated conduit. In addition there seems to be limited open breaker slots in the main panel. I think there is enough room for a double breaker.
So it seems I need a pair of 50 amp breakers to tie-in the SMA 240 inverter. I have two open slots in the Main panel but they are not located together. Here is a picture of the beast. I buzzed across a pair of open (but not adjoining) slots and the two open ones have 240V across them.

Question #1 Is it a relatively simple matter to reorganize the breakers to get a pair of 240V breakers grouped at the bottom of the fuse box?
There is an existing open double at the bottom left with a 15 and 20 amp circuit breakers just above. The 15 and 20 could be moved to two other open slots without regard to phase provide the wire is long enough to support it which it seems it is as everything still stay on the lower portion of the panel.
Question #2 Where is the main breaker? Neither the Main or the subpanel have what I recognize as a Main breaker(my last house had one in Ca and I think they seemed to be common place there). There is a locked box coming out of the ground at the foot of the driveway. I assume this is power as all the other utilities are represented in one way or another outside of this box.
Follow up to Question #2a
In the absence of a main breaker and the secret lock on the street I'm assuming that the power company has to be called in to switch off the mains inside of that little box.
Follow up to Question #2b
Is it possible to put in a AC disconnect inside of the main panel? The meter and the main panel are separated by little more than 3" of 2" conduit. Basically I'm asking as rewiring the service connection between the meter and the main panel is probably non trivial.
TIA.
Comment