Top Emergency Electricians in Montauk, NY, 11954 | Compare & Call
Daniel H Boerem & Son
Q&A
We just lost all power and smell something burning from the panel. How fast can an electrician get here?
For a burning smell with a total power loss, we treat it as a critical emergency. Dispatched from near the Montauk Point Lighthouse, we can typically be on-site in Montauk Village within 20 minutes via NY-27. Our first priority is to safely isolate the fault at your main service disconnect to prevent a fire. We'll then diagnose the issue, which often involves failed bus bars or a damaged main breaker in an older panel, and provide a clear path to restoration.
Our Montauk Village home was built in 1978 and still has the original wiring. Why are our lights dimming when we use the microwave and space heater at the same time?
Your home's electrical system is now 48 years old, and the original NM-B Romex wiring was designed for a different era. Modern 2026 appliance loads, especially from high-draw items like space heaters and induction cooktops, demand more amperage than those circuits were intended to carry. This can cause voltage drops, which manifest as dimming lights, and can create dangerous heat buildup at connections. An upgrade from your 100A service is often the necessary, code-compliant solution to safely meet today's electrical demands.
What's involved in getting a permit from the Town of East Hampton for a panel upgrade, and why is it so important?
Permitting through the Town of East Hampton Building Department and final inspection are legal requirements that protect your home's value and your safety. The process involves submitting detailed load calculations and a diagram of the new service. We handle this red tape as part of the job. More critically, work must comply with NEC 2020 and be performed by a licensed electrician, as verified by Suffolk County DLC. Skipping permits risks a failed insurance claim after a loss, fines, and difficulty selling your home. Proper documentation proves the work was done to modern safety standards.
Our power comes in on an overhead mast. What are the common issues with that setup we should watch for?
Overhead service masts are standard here but are vulnerable to specific wear. High winds off the water can stress the masthead and service drop connections, while salt air accelerates corrosion on aluminum service entrance cables. We frequently find deteriorated weatherheads or loose connections at the mast that allow moisture infiltration, leading to internal corrosion and increased fire risk. During an inspection, we check the mast's structural integrity, the condition of the drip loop, and the tightness of all terminations. Upgrading to a new mast and weatherhead is often part of a service panel replacement.
Our lights flicker during storms, and we're worried about our smart home gadgets. Is this a PSEG issue or something in our house?
Coastal storm activity on Long Island creates a moderate surge risk that can affect the entire grid. While PSEG manages the primary distribution, flickering inside your home often points to loose connections at an aging panel or within branch circuit wiring. These micro-surges and voltage sags are particularly hard on sensitive modern electronics. Installing whole-house surge protection at your main panel is a critical defense layer, safeguarding your investment in smart home systems from both external grid events and internal electrical instability.
How can we prepare our Montauk home's electrical system for a summer brownout or a winter ice storm?
Coastal homes face dual threats: summer AC peaks straining an older grid and winter ice storms threatening overhead lines. For brownouts, ensure your critical circuits are on a properly sized and permitted backup generator with a transfer switch to avoid back-feeding the grid. For winter readiness, have an electrician verify your service mast and overhead connections are secure against ice load. In both scenarios, whole-house surge protection is non-negotiable to protect appliances from the voltage fluctuations that accompany these grid disturbances.
I'm worried our Federal Pacific panel can't handle adding a heat pump or EV charger. Is our 100A service from 1978 even upgradeable?
Your concern is valid. Federal Pacific panels have a known history of failing to trip during overloads, posing a significant fire hazard, and should be replaced regardless of any upgrade plans. A 100A service from 1978 cannot safely support the additional load of a Level 2 EV charger or a modern heat pump system. A full service upgrade to 200A is the required foundation. This involves replacing the hazardous panel, upgrading the service entrance conductors, and ensuring your grounding electrode system meets current NEC 2020 standards for coastal installations.
We live in the coastal dune area near the lighthouse. Could the sandy, rocky soil be affecting our home's electrical grounding?
Absolutely. The sandy, low-conductivity soil common in Montauk's dune and scrub terrain can severely compromise a grounding electrode system's effectiveness. A proper ground is your electrical system's safety foundation, directing fault current safely into the earth. In rocky or sandy soil, standard ground rods may not achieve the low resistance required by code. We often need to install additional rods, use longer driven rods, or employ other approved methods like a concrete-encased electrode (Ufer ground) to ensure your system has a reliable path to earth, which is crucial for surge protection and breaker operation.