Top Emergency Electricians in Clawson, MI, 48017 | Compare & Call
Frequently Asked Questions
My power is out and I smell something burning—how fast can an electrician get here?
For an urgent issue like a burning smell, we prioritize immediate dispatch. From a starting point near Clawson City Park, we can typically reach most homes in the city within 5 to 8 minutes using I-75 and local routes. Your first action should be to shut off the main breaker at the panel if it's safe to do so. This prevents potential fire spread while we are en route to diagnose the fault, which often originates at an overloaded connection or a failing Federal Pacific panel.
How should I prepare my home's electrical system for a Michigan ice storm or summer brownout?
Preparation focuses on safety and backup power. For winter ice storms that can bring down lines, ensure you have a properly installed and permitted generator transfer switch to avoid back-feeding the grid, which is lethal to utility workers. During peak summer AC demand, brownouts (low voltage) can damage compressor motors. Installing a hardwired whole-house surge protector safeguards appliances from the spikes that often occur when grid power restores. These steps, combined with ensuring your service mast and connections are secure, mitigate climate-related electrical hazards.
Do I really need a permit to replace my electrical panel in Clawson?
Yes, a permit from the City of Clawson Building Department is legally required and critical for safety. Panel replacement must comply with the current NEC 2023 code, which includes updates for AFCI and GFCI protection that older installations lack. The inspection process verifies correct wiring, proper grounding, and load calculations. As a Master Electrician licensed through Michigan LARA, I handle the permit paperwork and ensure the installation passes inspection, protecting your home's value and your insurance coverage while keeping the system safe.
Does the flat land near Clawson City Park affect my home's electrical grounding?
The flat urban landscape of Clawson generally supports good grounding conditions, but it requires proper installation. The primary concern here is ensuring your grounding electrode system—typically ground rods—is installed to full depth in the soil and has a low-resistance connection back to the panel. In any terrain, if this connection is corroded or inadequate, it can compromise surge protection and fault clearing. We verify this during a service evaluation, especially for older homes where the original ground may have degraded over decades.
Why do my lights dim when I run the microwave in my Clawson home?
Your Downtown Clawson home likely has original 1958 cloth-jacketed copper wiring, making the electrical system 68 years old. This older wiring, while often sound, was never designed to handle the simultaneous loads of modern appliances like microwaves, computers, and air conditioners. The 100-amp service common in that era is now at capacity, causing voltage drops that appear as dimming lights. Upgrading your panel and modernizing key circuits resolves this by providing stable power for 2026 living standards.
My smart devices keep resetting during storms. Is this a DTE grid problem or my wiring?
Moderate surge risk from seasonal thunderstorms on the DTE Energy grid can certainly cause this, but your home's internal protection is the first line of defense. Flickering lights or reseting electronics often point to inadequate whole-house surge protection at your service entrance and a lack of point-of-use protectors. While grid fluctuations occur, a properly installed surge protection device (SPD) on your main panel will clamp damaging spikes before they reach your sensitive electronics, supplementing any utility-side measures.
I have an old 100-amp panel. Can I add an EV charger or a heat pump?
A 1958-era 100-amp panel cannot safely support a Level 2 EV charger or a modern heat pump without a service upgrade. These high-demand devices require dedicated 40-60 amp circuits, which would overload your existing capacity and violate the National Electrical Code. Furthermore, if your panel is the recalled Federal Pacific brand, it presents a significant fire hazard and must be replaced before adding any major load. A full upgrade to a 200-amp service with a new, code-compliant panel is the necessary and safe foundation for these additions.
What's involved in upgrading an overhead electrical service mast on my Clawson house?
Upgrading an overhead mast service involves coordination with DTE Energy and the Clawson Building Department. The utility owns the line from the pole to your mast head, while you own the mast conduit and meter base. The process includes replacing the old mast and weatherhead with larger conduit to meet current clearance codes, installing a new meter socket, and often upgrading the service entrance cables. All this work requires a permit and a final inspection before DTE will reconnect power, ensuring the installation withstands our weather and is safe.