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Thanks for the reply, brewman. Â The more I think about it, I'm just going to get a GFCI breaker for the main panel in the house and forget about the disconnect box. Â If my spa needs service, I have an outside garage door operner that I can reprogram a code for the tech (if need be). Â My panel is in the garage.
So how do I make it big like Hubjeeps?
The GFCI box certainly has to qualify as a disconnect. Â It will be just about 5' from the corner.
I'm not sure if mine is different or not. Â My Midwest box looks different. Â It even has the capability to add another GFCI to it, with additional attachment terminals. Â Also, the pigtail came connected to a bus, and there is a large diameter aluminum rod that is mounted to the back face and truncates in the middle of the box, attached to nothing.I'll take a jpeg of it and try and figure out how to post it. Â Then maybe Brewman, STL, Hubjeep, or another guru can steer me the right way. Â I think I have it "wired", but additional help can't hurt!
Equipment using a GFCI breaker greater than 50 amps have NO application for 110volts thus a neutural is not part of the breaker. Â A wet boring drill using that amp capacity needs the 60 amp GFCI breaker but has nothing to do with 110 volts.Best source of information I would recommend is looking up Square D in the yellow pages and call them directly and speak to one of their engineers for a technical explanation. Â I find most electricians very confused when it come to three wire hook ups. Â They seem to insist on using a neutural on the load screw even though when they get to the spa there is NO place to put the neutural wire. Â When they put it on the common buss bar it trips the breaker, guaranteed.