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Common Questions
How can I prepare my home's electrical system for summer brownouts and winter ice storms in Lakewood?
For summer peak loads, ensure your air conditioning circuit and main panel connections are tight to prevent overheating during sustained use. For winter, a licensed electrician can install a generator interlock kit on your updated panel, allowing you to safely back up essential circuits with a portable generator during an outage. Given our surge risk, integrating whole-house surge protection during any panel work is a wise investment to protect against grid instability year-round.
We live on the high plains plateau near Green Mountain. Could the rocky soil affect our home's electrical grounding?
Absolutely. Proper grounding requires low-resistance contact with the earth. The dense, rocky soil common on the plateau near William Frederick Hayden Park can make achieving a reliable ground challenging. We often need to drive grounding rods deeper or use multiple rods to meet the NEC requirement of 25 ohms or less. A poor ground can lead to erratic breaker operation, equipment damage, and is a safety hazard during a lightning strike or fault condition.
My smart devices keep resetting after lightning storms. Is this an Xcel Energy grid problem or my house wiring?
Frequent lightning on the high plains makes the Xcel Energy grid in our area particularly susceptible to voltage surges. While some fluctuation is grid-related, your home's wiring acts as an antenna for these transient spikes, which can damage sensitive electronics. The issue is often a lack of proper whole-house surge protection at your main service panel. Installing a Type 1 or Type 2 surge protective device there, combined with point-of-use protectors, creates a layered defense to safeguard your investment in modern electronics.
My Lakewood home was built in 1976. Why do my lights dim when I run my modern appliances?
Your 50-year-old electrical system was designed for a different era. The original 100-amp panel and 1970s-era NM-B Romex wiring simply cannot supply the constant, high current demanded by today's multiple large appliances, computers, and entertainment systems simultaneously. This creates voltage drop, seen as dimming lights, and can overheat wiring over time. Upgrading the service panel and modernizing key circuits is often the most effective long-term solution for Green Mountain homes of this vintage.
My power comes from an overhead line to a mast on my roof. What should I watch for with this setup?
Overhead service masts, common in Lakewood neighborhoods developed in the 70s, are exposed to the elements. Inspect the mast head and conduit for rust, damage, or separation from the roofline. The service drop wires should have clear clearance from trees and should not be sagging excessively. If you're considering a service upgrade, the mast and weatherhead must often be replaced to handle larger, modern service cables. This overhead point is also the ideal location for a utility-side surge arrester.
Do I need a permit from the City of Lakewood to replace my electrical panel?
Yes, a permit from the Lakewood Building and Permitting Division is legally required for a panel replacement. This ensures the work is inspected for compliance with the current NEC 2023 code, which covers critical updates like AFCI protection and correct grounding. As a Master Electrician licensed through Colorado DORA, I handle the entire permit process—application, scheduling inspections, and providing the final certification. This official record is crucial for your home's safety file and future resale.
I have an old Federal Pacific panel and want to add an EV charger. Is my 100-amp service enough?
First, the Federal Pacific panel is a critical safety issue; these panels are known for failing to trip during a fault and are a leading fire hazard. They must be replaced before any major new load is added. Second, a 100-amp service from 1976 is almost certainly insufficient for a Level 2 EV charger, which can draw 40-50 amps alone. A modern all-electric home with an EV charger, heat pump, and standard appliances typically requires a 200-amp service. We would start with a panel replacement and load calculation to plan a safe upgrade path.
I smell something burning from an outlet. How fast can an electrician get to my house near William Frederick Hayden Park?
For a burning smell, we treat it as a priority dispatch. From our base, we route up C-470 and can typically be at a Green Mountain residence in 10 to 15 minutes. Until we arrive, shut off the breaker for that circuit at your main panel if it is safe to do so, and avoid using any outlets or switches on that circuit. A burning odor often indicates a failing connection or overloaded wiring that requires immediate professional diagnosis to prevent a fire.