I’m out of room for breakers in my main breaker box, so would like to add 6-breaker sub-panel to install mini-splits, an outdoor electrical outlet, lighting, etc. What’s the correct way to mount an exterior sub-panel on a house with lapped hardie-board siding?

I suppose the easiest thing would be to drill holes in the siding then attach the panel with screws to a stud and the exterior sheathing, but I don’t know if that’s a proper way to do things.

I also suppose I could somehow cut a rectangular hole in the siding and mount the subpanel directly on the sheathing. I’m not sure how to prevent water intrusion in that case (is some kind of flashing needed, or is just cock ok?). Seems like it would be hard to cut a clean rectangle in lapped fiber-cement siding on a vertical surface.

  • @PlantJam
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    21 year ago

    Your first idea is correct. You’ll likely need spacers to allow the screws for the box to tighten properly. I installed a heavy hose reel on similar siding using that method.

    Personally I would consult with an electrician for a job like this, but I’m also not comfortable doing any electrical work more serious than hanging a ceiling fan.

  • Antik 👾
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    English
    11 year ago

    Federation test after restore please ignore ;)

  • @pdavis
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    11 year ago

    Plantjam is correct. My electrician installed a main panel on my hardieboard and used 14-Gauge Electro-galvanized Half Slot Channel Struts to mount to. They mounted the struts horizontally through the Hardieboard into the sheathing/studs, caulking the screw penetrations. They then mounted the circuit breaker panel to the struts.You my need to add spacers.