Item 1) okay
Item 2) No, you want to limit the number of outlets. Too many outlets can create ground loop hums.
Item 3) The only problem is you will need either a 2-pole breaker space or subfeed lugs in the main 100 amp panel to feed a new subpanel.
Item 4 & 5) okay
Item 6) Every panel has two colums and x number of rows. You want to put all your breakers in alternate row side by side or above and below depending on the wiring diagram. Electrician's job; he'll know.
Item 7) NEVER NEVER NEVER use a circuit breaker rated over 20-amps for convenience outlet branch circuits. Illegal and dangerous. Convenience receptacles can only handle 15 or 20 amps max. The purpose of circuit breakers is protection - not performance. Your landlord and his lawyer may take a dim view of this.
Item 8) You will need receptacles that are isolated ground rated and wiring with black (hot), white (neutral) and green (ground) wires. The green wire attaches to the receptacle ground. Simply run the green wire back to the subpanel. Install a seperate ground bus for the wires to attach to. Electrician's job for sure. Not an issue with Romex - romex wiring has isolated grounding.
Item 2) No, you want to limit the number of outlets. Too many outlets can create ground loop hums.
Item 3) The only problem is you will need either a 2-pole breaker space or subfeed lugs in the main 100 amp panel to feed a new subpanel.
Item 4 & 5) okay
Item 6) Every panel has two colums and x number of rows. You want to put all your breakers in alternate row side by side or above and below depending on the wiring diagram. Electrician's job; he'll know.
Item 7) NEVER NEVER NEVER use a circuit breaker rated over 20-amps for convenience outlet branch circuits. Illegal and dangerous. Convenience receptacles can only handle 15 or 20 amps max. The purpose of circuit breakers is protection - not performance. Your landlord and his lawyer may take a dim view of this.
Item 8) You will need receptacles that are isolated ground rated and wiring with black (hot), white (neutral) and green (ground) wires. The green wire attaches to the receptacle ground. Simply run the green wire back to the subpanel. Install a seperate ground bus for the wires to attach to. Electrician's job for sure. Not an issue with Romex - romex wiring has isolated grounding.