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Gresham Park Electricians Pros

Gresham Park Electricians Pros

Gresham Park, GA
Emergency Electrician

Phone : (888) 903-2131

We handle electrical emergencies day or night in Gresham Park, GA. Call our on-call electricians now.
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Questions and Answers

I want to upgrade my electrical panel. What permits do I need from DeKalb County, and does the work have to be to current code?

All panel replacements in DeKalb County require a permit from the Planning and Sustainability Department. The work must be performed to the 2020 National Electrical Code (NEC) by a contractor licensed by the Georgia State Board of Electrical Contractors. We handle the permit application, scheduling inspections, and ensuring the installation meets all modern safety standards for AFCI protection and correct grounding.

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 Gresham Park, are exposed to weather and tree damage. Inspect the mast head and conduit for rust, sagging, or physical damage. The connection where the utility drop meets your mast is a frequent failure point during high winds. Ensuring this mast and its weatherhead are securely mounted and properly sealed is a fundamental part of home electrical maintenance.

My smart TVs and routers keep resetting after lightning storms. Is this a Georgia Power grid issue?

Frequent lightning in our area creates high surge risk on the Georgia Power grid. These voltage spikes travel into your home and can damage sensitive electronics, even if the power doesn’t fully go out. A whole-house surge protector installed at your main panel is the most effective defense, providing a critical layer of protection that basic power strips cannot match.

I smell burning plastic near my electrical panel. How fast can a master electrician get to my house in Gresham Park?

For a burning smell, treat it as an urgent safety issue. If you are near the Gresham Park Recreation Center, our dispatch can typically have a truck on the road within minutes. Using I-20, we can reach most homes in the neighborhood in 10 to 15 minutes. First, if it’s safe, shut off the main breaker at your service panel and call us immediately.

We have huge, old trees around our property near the Gresham Park Recreation Center. Could that affect our home's electricity?

Yes, the heavy tree canopy common here directly impacts electrical health. Branches can abrade overhead service lines, causing flickers or outages. More subtly, expansive root systems and organic soil can compromise your home’s grounding electrode system. This grounding is essential for safety and surge protection; we often test and upgrade ground rods in these conditions to meet code.

Can my 1967 house with a 100-amp panel safely add a Level 2 EV charger or a new heat pump?

Adding either a Level 2 charger or a heat pump to a 100-amp panel from 1967 is not advisable without an upgrade. These devices require dedicated, high-amperage circuits your current service likely cannot support. Furthermore, many homes from this era in Gresham Park have Federal Pacific panels, which are a known fire hazard and must be replaced before any major new load is installed.

How can I prepare my home's electrical system for summer brownouts and winter ice storms in Gresham Park?

For summer peaks, ensure your air conditioner has a dedicated, properly sized circuit and consider a hardwired surge protector. For winter storm preparedness, a properly installed and permitted generator with a transfer switch is key. This prevents back-feeding power to the grid, which is illegal and deadly for utility workers. Regular panel maintenance helps identify weak points before extreme weather hits.

My Gresham Park home was built in 1967. Why do my lights dim when the refrigerator and microwave run at the same time?

Your home’s electrical system is 59 years old. The original cloth-jacketed copper wiring and 100-amp service panel were designed for a different era, with far fewer energy demands. Modern kitchens and home offices pull much more current, overloading those older circuits. This causes voltage drops, which appear as dimming lights, and creates a fire risk from overheating wires inside your walls.

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