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Adonis Building and Electrical
Questions and Answers
I have a burning smell from my electrical panel and lost power. How fast can an electrician get here?
Treat a burning smell as an urgent safety issue. Shut off the main breaker and call for service immediately. From our central location near San Pablo City Hall, we can typically dispatch a truck via I-80 and reach most Wildcat Canyon addresses in 5-8 minutes for emergency calls. A prompt response is critical to diagnose the source, which could be a failing breaker or overheated bus bars, before it escalates.
Do the rolling hills near Wildcat Canyon affect my home's electrical grounding?
Yes, terrain can impact grounding. Rocky or variable soil conditions in hilly areas often lead to higher ground resistance, which can compromise the effectiveness of your grounding electrode system. This is a safety concern for fault current dissipation. We test ground resistance with specialized meters and may need to install additional grounding rods or a ground ring to meet NEC requirements and ensure proper system operation.
What permits are needed for an electrical panel upgrade in San Pablo, and who handles that?
Any panel replacement or service upgrade requires a permit from the San Pablo Building Division and a subsequent inspection. As a licensed electrician, we pull all necessary permits and ensure the installation complies with the current NEC 2023 code and all local amendments. Our license with the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) guarantees the work is bonded and insured, so you are protected from start to finish.
My lights in San Pablo flicker when the AC kicks on. Is this a problem with PG&E or my own wiring?
Flickering under load usually points to an internal issue, like a loose connection at your service entrance or an overloaded circuit, not the PG&E grid. While our area has low lightning-related surge risk, voltage sags from aging home wiring can still damage sensitive electronics. Diagnosing this involves checking the panel's bus bars, main lugs, and circuit integrity to ensure stable power delivery throughout your home.
How should I prepare my San Pablo home's electrical system for summer brownouts and winter storms?
For summer peaks, ensure your air conditioning circuit is dedicated and properly sized to prevent overloads. Consider a whole-house surge protector to guard electronics during grid fluctuations. For winter, a hardwired standby generator with an automatic transfer switch provides reliable backup during outages. These proactive measures protect your home's capacity and prevent damage from the region's temperature extremes.
My home in Wildcat Canyon was built around 1971. Is the original wiring still safe to use?
A home from 1971 has a 55-year-old electrical system, which is beyond its expected service life. Original NM-B Romex wiring from that era is often undersized for the continuous loads of modern appliances and lacks the arc-fault protection now required by code. In Wildcat Canyon, many homes struggle with insufficient circuits and overheating outlets because the system was not designed for today's power demands. A thorough safety evaluation is the first step to prevent potential fire hazards.
My home has overhead service lines coming from a pole. What should I know about maintaining this setup?
Overhead mast service requires clearances from roofs and trees to be maintained for safety and reliability. Inspect the masthead and weatherhead annually for corrosion or damage, especially after wind events common in rolling hill areas. The service drop conductors are PG&E's responsibility, but the mast, conduit, and connections to your meter are yours. Ensuring this assembly is secure and up to code prevents service interruptions and weather-related faults.
I have an old 100-amp panel and want to install a Level 2 EV charger. Is my current system safe to handle it?
A 100-amp service from 1971 is almost certainly inadequate for a Level 2 EV charger, which can draw 40-50 amps on its own. More critically, many panels from that era in San Pablo are the recalled Federal Pacific brand, which are a known fire risk due to breakers that fail to trip. Adding a major new load to this combination is unsafe. A full service upgrade to 200 amps and panel replacement is the necessary, code-compliant path forward.