Top Emergency Electricians in Texarkana, AR, 71854 | Compare & Call
R&W Electric
ALLHEART Electric
Service First Electrical and Plumbing
Shaw Construction and Design
Questions and Answers
My lights flicker and my smart devices reset during storms. Is this a problem with SWEPCO or my house wiring?
Flickering during storms is often a grid issue from SWEPCO, especially given our region's high lightning strike quality. However, your home's internal protection is the critical line of defense. While utility-side surges are common, repeated flickering can also indicate loose connections within your home's wiring that worsen with voltage fluctuations. To protect sensitive 2026 electronics, a whole-house surge protector installed at the main panel is a mandatory upgrade, working in tandem with point-of-use protectors for valuable equipment.
How should I prepare my Texarkana home's electrical system for ice storms and summer brownouts?
For winter lows around 15°F, ensure heating systems are serviced and have a licensed electrician install a proper generator transfer switch—never use improvised back-feeding. Summer AC peaks strain the grid, making whole-house surge protection and ensuring proper HVAC circuit capacity vital to prevent brownout damage. Consider upgrading to a smart thermostat on a dedicated circuit to manage cooling loads efficiently. These proactive steps harden your system against both seasonal extremes.
What permits and codes are involved in upgrading my electrical panel or adding an EV charger in Texarkana?
All major work requires a permit from the Texarkana Building Permits and Inspections Department and must comply with the 2020 National Electrical Code, which Arkansas follows. This includes panel replacements, new circuits for EV chargers, and service upgrades. As a master electrician licensed by the Arkansas Department of Labor and Licensing, I handle the entire process: securing permits, performing the work to NEC 2020 standards—which now mandates specific EV charger circuit rules—and scheduling the required inspections to ensure your system is both safe and legally compliant.
I have a Federal Pacific panel and want to add an EV charger and heat pump. Is my 100-amp service safe for this?
A Federal Pacific panel presents a significant safety hazard due to its known failure to trip during overloads, and it should be replaced regardless of other plans. Even with a new panel, a 100-amp service from 1979 is almost certainly insufficient for adding a Level 2 EV charger and a modern heat pump simultaneously. These are major electrical loads that typically require a service upgrade to 200 amps. The existing wiring also needs assessment to ensure it can handle the new dedicated circuits required by code.
My power comes in on an overhead wire to a mast on the roof. What are the common maintenance issues with this setup?
Overhead service entrances with a roof mast are standard for homes of your era in Texarkana. Common issues include weatherhead deterioration, mast corrosion where it meets the roof, and cable tension changes from thermal expansion over decades. These can allow moisture ingress, leading to corrosion inside the panel. We also inspect for proper mast height and clearance from the utility drip loop. Any sagging or damage to the overhead service cable from the pole is a utility (SWEPCO) concern, but the home's attachment point is your responsibility.
I smell something burning from an outlet and lost power. How fast can an electrician get to College Hill?
A burning smell is a top-priority emergency. From our dispatch point near Spring Lake Park, we can typically be en route via I-30 within minutes for an 8-12 minute response to College Hill. The first step is to shut off power at the main breaker if it's safe to do so. Our immediate goal is to secure the home, identify the overheated connection—often at a receptacle or within the panel—and prevent a potential fire before restoring safe, temporary power.
We have a lot of trees near Spring Lake Park. Could that be causing issues with my home's power quality?
The rolling, wooded plains around College Hill absolutely impact electrical health. A heavy tree canopy near overhead service lines can cause physical damage, flickering from branch contact, and increased vulnerability during storms. Furthermore, the rocky, clay-rich soil common here can compromise grounding electrode resistance, which is essential for safety and surge dissipation. An expert should test your grounding system and inspect the service drop from the pole to your mast for any vegetation-related wear or interference.
My College Hill house was built in 1979 and the lights dim when the AC kicks on. Is my wiring just too old?
Your home's electrical system is 47 years old, and that original NM-B Romex wiring was installed for a different era. Modern 2026 appliance loads—like computers, large-screen TVs, and high-efficiency HVAC—demand more stable power than these circuits were designed to handle. Dimming lights often point to an overloaded 100-amp panel struggling with simultaneous high-wattage draws. This isn't just an inconvenience; it's a sign the system is operating at its historical limit and requires a professional load calculation.