Top Emergency Electricians in Saint Joseph, MO, 64501 | Compare & Call
Divers Mechanical
MJ Electrician IN
South Park Electric & Lighting Center
Questions and Answers
Can my 1959 house with a 100-amp panel safely add a Level 2 EV charger or a heat pump?
Safely, no. A 100-amp service from 1959, especially if it contains a Federal Pacific panel, lacks the capacity and modern safety mechanisms. Installing a Level 2 charger or a heat pump requires a service upgrade to 200 amps and a new panel with AFCI/GFCI protection. The existing cloth wiring would also need evaluation. This is a necessary project before adding those major loads.
What's involved in upgrading the electrical service on a house with an overhead mast?
Upgrading an overhead service involves coordinating with Evergy. We replace the existing mast, meter socket, and service entrance cables to handle the increased amperage, then install a new indoor panel. The Saint Joseph Planning Department requires a permit for this work. The overhead lines mean the utility must schedule a temporary disconnect, but the process is standard for our South Side neighborhoods.
How should I prepare my Saint Joseph home's electrical system for ice storms and summer brownouts?
For winter, ensure your heating circuits are dedicated and on healthy breakers, and consider a hardwired backup generator installed with a proper transfer switch. For summer peaks, a service upgrade mitigates brownout strain. In both cases, whole-house surge protection is critical, as grid fluctuations during these events are a primary cause of damage to appliances and electronics.
My smart TV and router keep resetting during Evergy thunderstorms. Is that a wiring problem?
It's likely a combination of Evergy's grid experiencing moderate surge risk from our seasonal storms and insufficient protection in your home. While wiring can be a factor, the immediate fix is to install a whole-house surge protector at your main panel. This defends all your electronics from spikes entering via the utility lines, which standard power strips cannot handle.
We live on the bluffs near Krug Park and have intermittent electrical noise on our audio system.
The rolling bluffs and heavy tree canopy in that area can influence grounding. Poor grounding, often due to rocky soil, can lead to interference or 'noise' on your circuits. A proper evaluation of your home's grounding electrode system, including the rods and their connection to your panel's neutral bus, is needed. This ensures a clean earth reference point and can eliminate that interference.
The lights went out and I smell something burning—how fast can an electrician get here?
For a burning smell, we treat it as a priority dispatch. From our shop near Krug Park, we can typically reach most South Side addresses in 8 to 12 minutes using I-229. Your first action should be to go to your main panel and shut off the power if it's safe to do so, then call. We carry diagnostic tools and common replacement parts on our trucks for such emergencies.
I want to add a circuit. Do I need a permit, and does the work have to follow the newest code?
Yes, adding a circuit requires a permit from the Saint Joseph Planning and Community Development Department. As a Master Electrician licensed by the Missouri Division of Professional Registration, all my work is performed to the current NEC 2023 code, which mandates AFCI protection for most new branch circuits. This isn't just red tape; it's your guarantee of a safe, compliant, and insurable installation.
Why do our lights dim when the AC kicks on in our 1950s South Side Saint Joseph home?
Your 1959 home has original cloth-jacketed copper wiring, which is now 67 years old. While the copper itself is still conductive, the insulation can be brittle, and the entire 100-amp system was never designed to handle the simultaneous loads of modern central air, computers, and large kitchen appliances. This causes voltage drops, seen as dimming lights, because the system's capacity is simply maxed out.