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Suburban Electric Contractors
A J Danbolse Son Plumbing
Common Questions
How should I prepare my Northville home's electrical system for summer brownouts and winter ice storms?
Preparation focuses on protection and backup. For summer AC peaks, ensure your panel and breakers are in good condition to handle the load without overheating. For winter ice storms that can cause prolonged outages, consider a professionally installed generator interlock kit. This allows you to safely back up essential circuits. In both scenarios, whole-house surge protection is non-negotiable to guard against grid fluctuations.
My power comes from an overhead line on a mast. What are the common issues with this setup in a suburban area like Northville?
Overhead mast service, while common here, exposes your electrical entrance to the elements. The masthead (weatherhead) can degrade, allowing moisture into your service cables. Heavy ice accumulation or falling limbs can strain or damage the mast and the utility's service drop. We inspect the mast's integrity, the conduit seals, and the service cable condition during any evaluation, as these are failure points that can lead to outages or water damage inside your panel.
My Northville Historic District home was built in 1968 and still has cloth-jacketed copper wiring. Why are my lights dimming when the microwave runs?
Your electrical system is now 58 years old, and cloth-jacketed copper wiring from that era was never designed for today's simultaneous appliance loads. Modern kitchens can easily draw 30-40 amps on one circuit, which overwhelms the original branch circuits. This causes voltage drops, seen as dimming lights, and creates a persistent fire risk from overheating wires inside the walls.
What permits are needed from the Northville Building Department to upgrade my electrical panel?
A panel upgrade requires an electrical permit from the Northville Building Department, and the work must be performed by a licensed Master Electrician, as regulated by Michigan LARA. The installation must comply fully with the NEC 2023, which includes updated requirements for AFCI protection and grounding. As your electrician, I handle the entire permit process—filing the application, scheduling inspections, and ensuring the final work passes the city's inspection for your safety and compliance.
My smart home devices keep resetting during DTE Energy storms. Is this a grid problem or my wiring?
This is likely a combination of both. DTE's overhead grid in our area faces moderate surge risk from seasonal ice storms, which can send voltage spikes into your home. Your 1968-era wiring lacks the inherent surge protection for sensitive modern electronics. Installing a whole-house surge protector at your service entrance is a critical first step to shield your devices from both utility-side events and internal surges.
We have a heavy tree canopy near Mill Race Village. Could that be causing our lights to flicker?
Yes, absolutely. A dense tree canopy can cause physical line interference where branches abrade or short against DTE's primary service drops, especially during high winds. This creates intermittent faults that manifest as flickering lights inside your home. Furthermore, rocky soil common in this area can compromise your home's grounding electrode system, which is essential for stabilizing voltage and safety during such events.
There's a burning smell from my outlet in Northville. How fast can a Master Electrician get here?
For an active electrical fire hazard, we dispatch immediately. From our starting point near Mill Race Village, we can typically reach most Historic District locations via I-275 within 5-8 minutes. Your safety is the priority; if you see smoke or sparks, evacuate and call 911 first, then call us. We will secure the area and perform the emergency repair on-site.
I have an old 100-amp panel and want to install a Level 2 EV charger and a heat pump. Is my current system safe for this?
A 100-amp service from 1968 cannot safely support those major additions. A Level 2 charger alone requires a 40-50 amp dedicated circuit, and a heat pump adds another 30-50 amps. More critically, we must first inspect the panel brand. Many Northville homes from this era have recalled Federal Pacific panels, which are a known fire hazard and must be replaced before any upgrade can proceed.