by Jerry Peck - Codeman on Thu Jan 12, 2017 12:46 pm
Bill,
I see some piggyback breakers higher up in the panel, and then all those tandem breakers too - looks like way too many breakers (circuits) in that panel, but the only way to know would be the schematic part of the label - that would not only show how many of which type (piggyback or tandem) are permitted, but also where they are permitted to be placed in that panel.
The more important issue that I see which may be presentis all those red conducts - typically that indicates 3-conductor circuits, and 3-conductor circuits typically indicated multiwire-branch circuits, and multiwire-branch circuits need to be connected phase to phase for 240 volts between the conductors (120 volts to neutral) ... and those may be connected to the same breaker - which means the neutral is not serving as a "neutral" for only the differential current between the two legs, the 'neutral' would now carry the full current of both legs and could be overloaded to twice capacity.
Determining if those circuits are multiwire-branch circuit, and determining how they are wired, would take someone poking around in the panel tracing wires and checking voltages.
Determining if any/all/which/how many of those tandem/piggyback breakers are allowed would take finding the schematic and reviewing what it shows being allowed where.
Jerry Peck - CodeMan
AskCodeMan.com
Construction Litigation Consultant - Retired
Construction and Code Consultant - Semi Retired