Top Emergency Electricians in Medley, FL, 33178 | Compare & Call
Volt Electric
Safety Electric
Questions and Answers
My smart home devices keep getting fried during Florida storms. Is this a problem with Florida Power & Light or my house?
While Florida Power & Light manages the grid, the high surge risk from Florida's frequent lightning is ultimately a homeowner's responsibility to mitigate. Utility-side protection is not designed to safeguard sensitive electronics inside your home. A whole-house surge protective device (SPD) installed at your main service panel is the professional standard. This device, compliant with NEC 2023, absorbs massive voltage spikes before they enter your wiring, protecting your smart home systems, appliances, and entertainment centers.
My Medley home was built in 1979 and the lights dim when the AC kicks on. Is the original wiring too old?
Homes in the Medley Residential District from that era, like yours, have a 47-year-old electrical system. Original NM-B Romex wiring from 1979 is often undersized for modern 2026 appliance loads, which include large-screen TVs, computers, and high-efficiency HVAC systems. The 100-amp service panel common at that time is now considered minimal for a fully equipped home. This combination of aged wiring and limited capacity frequently causes voltage drop, manifesting as dimming lights, and prevents the safe addition of major new loads without an upgrade.
I want to upgrade my electrical panel. What permits are needed from the Town of Medley, and what codes apply?
A service panel upgrade requires a permit from the Town of Medley Building Department and must be performed by a contractor licensed by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. The installation will be inspected to ensure it meets the current NEC 2023 code, which includes requirements for AFCI and GFCI protection, correct working clearances, and proper grounding. As the Master Electrician on the project, I handle securing the permit, scheduling inspections, and ensuring all work meets these standards, so you have a safe, legal, and insurable installation.
I just lost all power in my house and smell something burning near the panel. Who can get here fast?
A total power loss with a burning odor indicates a critical fault, such as a failed main breaker or overheated bus bars, that requires immediate shutdown. From our location near Medley Town Hall, we can typically dispatch to your address within 8-12 minutes via Florida's Turnpike. Do not attempt to reset the main breaker. The priority is a safe, emergency evaluation to locate the source of the overheating and prevent an electrical fire before any restoration of power is considered.
I found a Federal Pacific panel in my 1979 home. Can I add a Level 2 EV charger or a new heat pump?
Adding a Level 2 EV charger or a heat pump to a home with a Federal Pacific panel is not advisable and is likely unsafe. These panels have a known, widespread failure rate for their breakers, which may not trip during an overload or short circuit, creating a severe fire hazard. Furthermore, your existing 100-amp service is almost certainly insufficient for the added 30-50 amp draw of an EV charger. A full service upgrade to a modern, code-compliant 200-amp panel is the necessary first step for both safety and capacity.
My home has an overhead mast and service drop from the pole. What are the common issues with this setup?
Overhead service masts, common in Medley, are exposed to Florida's harsh weather. The mast itself can corrode or become loose, and the service entrance cables can degrade from UV exposure and storm damage. Tree limbs from the flat, fast-growing landscape can also abrade the lines. This external wiring is the utility's responsibility up to the weatherhead, but the mast, conduit, and connections to your meter are part of your home. Any sagging, corrosion, or damage here should be addressed promptly, as it compromises the entire electrical service entrance.
We live on the flat coastal plain near Medley Town Hall. Could the soil affect our home's electrical grounding?
Yes, the terrain directly impacts your grounding system's effectiveness. The sandy, often moist soil of Florida's coastal plain can be corrosive to buried grounding electrodes like ground rods. Over decades, this corrosion can increase the resistance of your home's grounding path, which is critical for safety during a lightning strike or internal fault. During a panel inspection or upgrade, we test the grounding electrode system to ensure it meets the low-resistance requirements of the NEC, which is vital for surge dissipation and overall system stability.
How should I prepare my home's electrical system for summer brownouts and the occasional winter cold snap?
For summer peak season, ensure your HVAC system has been professionally serviced and consider installing a dedicated hardwired surge protector for the condenser unit. For backup during extended outages, a properly installed and permitted generator with a transfer switch is the safest solution—never use a portable generator plugged directly into a wall outlet. While winter lows near 45°F are mild, they can still strain heating systems; verifying your electrical connections are tight prevents heat buildup that could cause failures when systems are running continuously.