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Tri County Electric Cooperative
FAQs
What permits and codes are involved if I need to upgrade my electrical panel in Madison County?
Any service upgrade or panel replacement requires a permit from the Madison County Building Department and must be installed to the current NEC 2023 code, which mandates AFCI protection for most living areas. As a Master Electrician licensed by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, I handle pulling the permit, scheduling the required inspections, and ensuring the installation passes. This process is non-negotiable for your safety, insurance, and legal compliance, especially when replacing a known hazard like a Federal Pacific panel.
I have an old 100-amp Federal Pacific panel. Can I safely add a Level 2 EV charger or a new heat pump?
With a Federal Pacific panel and a 100A service from 1964, adding a high-demand appliance is not safe or feasible without significant upgrades. Federal Pacific panels are a known fire hazard due to faulty breakers that can fail to trip. Furthermore, a Level 2 charger or modern heat pump requires dedicated, high-amperage circuits that a 100A service, already supporting a home's baseline load, cannot provide. A full service upgrade to 200A and panel replacement is the necessary first step for safety and capacity.
My smart TV and router keep getting fried during storms. Is this a Duke Energy grid problem or something in my house?
While Duke Energy manages the grid, the high lightning surge risk in our area means protection is ultimately a homeowner's responsibility. Power surges enter through the utility lines, your AC system, and even phone/cable lines. A whole-house surge protector installed at your main panel is essential to defend your electronics. For critical devices, you should also use point-of-use protectors. The existing electrical service in a 1964 home offers almost no defense against these transient voltage spikes.
The power is out and I smell burning from an outlet. How fast can an electrician get to my house near the Madison County Courthouse?
For an urgent safety call like a burning smell, we treat it as a priority dispatch. From our starting point near the Courthouse, we can typically be en route via I-10 and reach most Downtown Madison locations within that 5-8 minute window. Your first action should be to go to your main 100A panel and shut off the breaker for that circuit if it is safe to do so, then call for service immediately to prevent a potential fire.
My power comes from an overhead line to a mast on the roof. What are the common issues with this setup in an older neighborhood?
Overhead service masts, common for homes of your era, are vulnerable points. The mast itself can corrode or become loose, and the service entrance cables can degrade after 60 years of sun and weather. During storms, falling limbs are a direct threat. We also frequently find that the weatherhead—the fitting where the utility line meets your home—is damaged or improperly sealed, allowing moisture into your panel. An inspection should verify the mast's structural integrity and the condition of all service entrance components.
Could the tall pines and soil around my property near Downtown Madison be affecting my electricity?
Yes, the rolling pine forest terrain directly impacts electrical health. A heavy tree canopy near overhead service drops can cause interference, flickering, and outages during high winds. More critically, the sandy, well-drained soil common here can challenge your grounding electrode system. Proper grounding is fundamental for safety and surge dissipation, and older electrodes may no longer meet the 25-ohm resistance requirement. An electrical inspection should include testing the grounding system.
Why do my lights dim when I use my microwave in my Downtown Madison home built in the 1960s?
Your home's original 62-year-old cloth-jacketed copper wiring was sized for a different era of electrical demand. Modern appliances like microwaves, air conditioners, and computers draw far more consistent power than the lighting and simple outlets these systems were designed for. This aged wiring often has degraded insulation and higher resistance, which can cause noticeable voltage drop—seen as dimming lights—under load, signaling the system is struggling to meet 2026 standards.
How should I prepare my home's electrical system for summer brownouts or a winter ice storm in Madison?
For summer peaks, ensure your AC system is on a dedicated, properly sized circuit and consider having its capacitors and connections checked. A licensed electrician can also assess if your 100A service is being overloaded. For winter storm preparedness, a permanently installed generator with an automatic transfer switch is the safest and most reliable backup. Never use a portable generator without a proper transfer device, as back-feeding power into the grid is illegal and deadly for utility workers.