Top Emergency Electricians in Burbank, CA, 91501 | Compare & Call
Q&A
What permits are needed from the Burbank Building and Safety Division to upgrade my electrical panel?
Replacing a service panel or upgrading capacity always requires a permit from the Burbank Building and Safety Division. As a C-10 licensed contractor, we handle the entire process: filing the plans, scheduling inspections, and ensuring the installation meets NEC 2023 and all local amendments. This legal oversight is crucial for your safety and home value. The inspection verifies proper wire sizing, grounding, bonding, and that the new panel is listed for use, replacing any recalled or hazardous equipment like Federal Pacific panels.
My Magnolia Park home still has its original 1958 cloth wiring. Why do my lights dim when the new refrigerator kicks on?
Your electrical system is 68 years old, and cloth-jacketed copper wiring from that era was designed for a different load profile. Modern refrigerators, air conditioners, and entertainment systems draw more power with different startup surges. The insulation can be brittle, and the original circuits are often overloaded, leading to voltage drop—that dimming you see. Upgrading branch circuits and the service panel addresses this capacity and safety issue directly.
I have an old 100-amp panel and want to add an EV charger. Is my 1958 Burbank house wired for this?
A 1958 home with a 100-amp service and likely a Federal Pacific panel faces significant challenges for a Level 2 EV charger. The charger alone can demand 40-50 amps, which would overload your existing capacity alongside central air or an electric range. Furthermore, Federal Pacific panels are a known fire hazard and should be replaced. A full service upgrade to 200 amps is the standard, safe solution to support modern electric vehicle charging and other high-demand appliances.
How should I prepare my home's electrical system for a summer heat wave in Burbank?
Summer AC use strains older electrical systems. Before peak season, have a licensed electrician inspect your air conditioner's dedicated circuit, connections at the panel, and overall load capacity. Ensure your service entrance cables and mast are secure. Consider installing a whole-house surge protector; while lightning risk is low, grid switching during brownouts can send damaging surges through your lines. These steps help prevent overloads and protect sensitive electronics during sustained high demand.
My power is out and I smell something burning near my panel. How fast can an electrician get here?
For an active electrical emergency like a burning smell, we dispatch immediately. From our shop near Burbank Town Center, we can typically reach most Magnolia Park homes within 12 to 18 minutes using I-5 and local routes. Your first step is to shut off the main breaker if it's safe to do so. We prioritize these calls because they indicate a potential fire hazard that requires immediate professional diagnosis.
My lights flicker occasionally. Is this a problem with Burbank Water and Power or my home's wiring?
Occasional flickering usually points to a problem within your home's electrical system, not the BWP grid. Loose connections at an outlet, a failing breaker, or overloaded circuits are common culprits. While Burbank has a low lightning surge risk, minor grid fluctuations do occur. A professional can isolate the issue by checking your panel's bus bars and branch circuit connections. Persistent flickering should never be ignored as it indicates arcing, a primary cause of electrical fires.
We live in the flat basin near the Town Center. Does the valley terrain affect our home's electrical grounding?
The flat valley basin of Burbank generally provides stable soil conditions for a proper grounding electrode system. However, over decades, soil composition can change and corrosion can set in. We verify that your grounding electrodes—typically metal rods driven into the earth—maintain a low-resistance connection back to the panel. This is critical for safety, as it ensures fault current has a reliable path to trip the breaker and prevent shock, regardless of the gentle terrain.
I see the overhead power lines connected to a mast on my roof. Is this type of service entrance outdated?
Overhead service via a mast is still a common and code-compliant method, especially for older homes in suburban areas like Magnolia Park. The key is its condition. The mast, conduit, and weatherhead must be securely mounted and free of corrosion or damage where the utility's drop cable connects. We inspect for proper mast height, secure attachment to the structure, and integrity of the entrance cables where they pass into your meter panel. Upgrades are often needed to meet current clearance and structural standards.