Top Emergency Electricians in Phillipsburg, NJ, 08865 | Compare & Call
Len Jessamine
Sunpro Electric
Common Questions
We lost all power and smell something burning near our panel. How fast can an electrician get to us in Downtown Phillipsburg?
For a burning smell or complete power loss, we treat it as a priority dispatch. From our shop near Shappell Park, we can typically be on site within 5-8 minutes using US Route 22. The immediate action is to shut off the main breaker at the meter if it's safe to do so, as this could indicate a failing panel or a severe overload. We will diagnose the issue at the bus bars and breakers to prevent a potential fire.
We have an old 60-amp panel and want to add a heat pump and an EV charger. Is our current setup safe for this in Phillipsburg?
A 60-amp service from 1942 cannot safely support those additions. A heat pump alone often requires a 40-50 amp circuit, and a Level 2 EV charger needs another 40-60 amps. Attempting this would chronically overload the system. Furthermore, if the panel is a Federal Pacific brand, it presents a separate, critical safety hazard due to known failure of its breakers to trip during overloads. A full service upgrade to 200 amps is the required first step.
We live on a rocky hillside near Shappell Park. Could that affect our home's electrical grounding?
Absolutely. Rocky, high-resistance soil makes it challenging to establish a proper grounding electrode system, which is your home's critical safety path for fault current. We often need to drive multiple grounding rods or use a concrete-encased electrode (Ufer ground) to achieve the low-resistance connection required by code. Poor grounding can lead to erratic breaker operation, damaging voltage surges, and increased shock hazard.
What's involved with getting a permit for an electrical upgrade from the Town of Phillipsburg?
As a New Jersey licensed master electrician, I handle the entire permit process with the Town of Phillipsburg Construction Office. This includes submitting detailed load calculations, panel schedules, and diagrams that comply with the 2023 NEC. After the work passes rough-in and final inspections, you receive documentation for your records. Using a licensed contractor ensures the work is legal, insurable, and meets all safety standards set by the New Jersey Board of Examiners.
Our Downtown Phillipsburg home was built in 1942 and still has the original wiring. Why is our electricity so unreliable now?
An 84-year-old electrical system is the core issue. Original knob and tube wiring from 1942 lacks a safety ground wire, which every modern appliance and device requires. Its insulation becomes brittle over decades, creating a fire risk, and the system was never designed for the simultaneous load of a central air conditioner, multiple computers, and a modern kitchen. Upgrading the service entrance and rewiring to current NEC standards is necessary for safety and capacity.
Our lights flicker whenever JCP&L has an issue on the grid. Are our new TVs and computers at risk?
Yes, they are at risk. Jersey Central Power & Light grid fluctuations, especially during our moderate-thunderstorm seasons, introduce damaging voltage spikes into your home. These micro-surges degrade sensitive electronics over time. Installing a whole-house surge protector at your main panel is a fundamental defense. For critical equipment, adding point-of-use protectors provides a second layer of security against data loss and hardware failure.
We have overhead power lines coming to our house. What should we watch for with this type of service?
Overhead service, common in the area, requires monitoring the masthead where the utility cables enter your home. Check for rust, loose fittings, or any sagging of the service drop cables themselves, especially after severe weather. Tree limbs contacting the lines can cause interference and outages. Ensure the conduit is securely mounted to the house; a compromised mast can pull away from the structure, creating a dangerous live wire hazard.
How should we prepare our home's electrical system for Phillipsburg's winter ice storms and summer brownouts?
Preparation focuses on backup power and surge protection. For extended winter outages, a properly installed and permitted generator with a transfer switch is key. Summer brownouts, caused by peak AC demand, strain motors in appliances like refrigerators. A whole-house surge protector guards against spikes when grid power flickers back on. Ensuring your service mast and overhead connections are secure prevents ice-load damage.