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Frequently Asked Questions
What permits and inspections are needed to replace my electrical panel in Long Beach?
The City of Long Beach Building Department requires a permit for a service panel replacement. As a Master Electrician licensed through the Nassau County Department of Consumer Affairs, I handle the permit application and schedule the rough and final inspections. The work must comply fully with the NEC 2020, which includes updated requirements for AFCI protection and grounding. Passing the final inspection provides documentation for your homeowner's insurance and is a legal requirement for the work.
I have an old Federal Pacific panel and want to install a heat pump and an EV charger. Is my current setup safe for this?
A Federal Pacific panel presents a significant safety hazard, as these are known for faulty breakers that fail to trip during an overload. Coupled with a standard 100-amp service from the 1960s, your system lacks the capacity for a heat pump and Level 2 EV charger. Both require dedicated, high-amperage circuits. The first step is a full service upgrade to a modern, code-compliant panel with a minimum 200-amp capacity, which will eliminate the fire risk and provide the necessary power.
Does living on the flat coastal plain near the ocean affect my home's electrical grounding?
The sandy, saline soil of our coastal plain has higher resistivity, which can challenge a grounding electrode system's effectiveness. A proper ground is critical for safety and surge dissipation. We often need to drive longer or additional grounding rods, or install a concrete-encased electrode (ufer ground), to achieve the low-resistance path required by code. This ensures your breakers trip correctly and surge protectors work during seasonal storms.
I smell burning plastic from an outlet. How fast can an electrician get to my house near the boardwalk?
For a burning smell, which indicates an active electrical fire risk, we treat it as a priority dispatch. From a service call near the Long Beach boardwalk, we can typically route via the Meadowbrook Parkway to be on-site within the hour. Immediately shut off the breaker for that circuit and unplug any devices. Do not use the outlet until it has been inspected and repaired by a licensed professional.
My West End home still has its original 1960s wiring. Why do my lights dim whenever I run the microwave and the air conditioner?
Your electrical system is now over 60 years old. The original knob-and-tube or early NM cable in many West End homes was designed for a few lights and an outlet per room, not the simultaneous high-wattage loads of a 2026 kitchen and central air conditioning. This causes significant voltage drop, seen as dimming lights, because the wiring can't deliver enough current. Upgrading the branch circuits and service panel is necessary to meet modern electrical code and prevent overheating.
My overhead service line from the pole looks old and is near a tree. Who is responsible for maintaining it?
PSEG Long Island owns and maintains the overhead service drop from the utility pole to the connection point on your house, known as the weatherhead or service mast. You are responsible for the mast, the meter socket, and all wiring beyond it into the home. If tree limbs are interfering with the utility lines, you should contact PSEG to trim them, as they pose a fire and outage risk, especially during high winds.
How should I prepare my home's electrical system for a summer brownout or an ice storm?
For summer brownouts, consider a hard-wired automatic transfer switch and a standby generator to maintain critical circuits like refrigeration. For winter ice storms that threaten prolonged outages, the same backup system is key. Ensure any portable generator is used with a proper transfer device to prevent back-feeding the grid, which is illegal and deadly for utility workers. Proactive measures like securing your overhead service mast against ice load are also wise.
My smart TVs and computers keep getting reset after storms. Is this a PSEG grid problem or something in my house?
Coastal storms on Long Island create a moderate surge risk for the PSEG grid, but the final protection point is your home's electrical system. Utility-level surges can travel inside, damaging sensitive electronics. While the grid is the initial source, the solution is installing a whole-house surge protective device at your main service panel. This device, rated for the high surge currents of our area, diverts excess voltage before it reaches your appliances and smart home devices.