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Pacific Coast Electric
Q&A
I have a 100-amp panel and want a heat pump and an EV charger. Is my 1988 electrical system safe for these upgrades?
Your current 100-amp service is insufficient for adding a Level 2 EV charger and a heat pump simultaneously; attempting it would overload the system. A critical first step is verifying your panel brand. If it's a Federal Pacific panel, which was common in homes of that era, it requires immediate replacement due to a known failure to trip during overloads, creating a serious fire risk. A full service upgrade to 200 amps is the necessary, safe foundation for these modern loads.
I need my Federal Pacific panel replaced. What permits and codes apply in Stayton, and does the electrician handle that?
Replacing a Federal Pacific panel is not just recommended, it's a critical safety upgrade. In Stayton, this work requires an electrical permit from the City Planning Department and must fully comply with the 2023 National Electrical Code, enforced by the Oregon Building Codes Division. A licensed master electrician will pull the permit, schedule inspections, and ensure the new panel, its AFCI breakers, and updated grounding meet all current standards, handling the red tape so you don't have to.
Why do my lights flicker and my router reset during Willamette Valley windstorms? Is this a Pacific Power issue or my house?
This is often a combination of both. The moderate surge risk from Pacific Power's grid, especially during our seasonal ice and wind storms, can introduce momentary faults and voltage sags. Your home's electrical system, particularly if it lacks whole-house surge protection at the main panel, then passes these irregularities directly to your sensitive electronics. Installing proper surge protection defends your equipment from these external grid events and internal surges from large appliances cycling on.
My overhead service mast looks old and leans slightly. As a homeowner with overhead lines, what am I responsible for maintaining?
You are responsible for the mast, the weatherhead, and the conduit down to your meter base—everything up to the utility's point of attachment. Pacific Power owns the drop from the pole to your house. A leaning mast, often seen on older homes, can strain connections and allow water ingress, leading to corrosion and fire risk inside your panel. This repair requires a permit from the City of Stayton Planning Department and should be handled by a licensed electrician to ensure the mast assembly meets current wind and ice load codes.
My 1988 Stayton home's lights dim when the microwave runs. Is this normal for a Downtown home with original wiring?
For a system now 38 years old, this is a common sign of capacity strain. Your original NM-B Romex wiring is fundamentally sound, but the standard 100-amp service from 1988 was not designed for the simultaneous load of today's high-draw appliances, multiple computers, and entertainment systems. This mismatch between 1988 capacity and 2026 demand can cause voltage drops, seen as dimming lights, and stresses the entire system.
The power's out and I smell something burning near my panel. How fast can an electrician get to my house near the Stayton Public Library?
Report any burning smell to Pacific Power immediately, then call for an electrician. From a central dispatch point like the library, a local master electrician can typically reach most Downtown Stayton homes in 3 to 5 minutes via OR-22 and side streets. For a potential fire hazard, we treat this as an immediate-priority dispatch to secure the home and prevent damage.
How should I prepare my home's electrical system for Stayton's winter ice storms and potential brownouts?
Winter heating surges and ice storm-related outages are a real concern here. Beyond having flashlights, consider a professionally installed generator interlock kit and portable generator to safely back up essential circuits. Ensure your heating system is on a dedicated, properly sized circuit. It's also the right time to install a service-entrance rated surge protector to shield your panel from ice-shedding related utility surges, as required by the 2023 NEC for many new installations.
Could the rolling, rocky soil near the foothills affect my home's electrical grounding and cause intermittent issues?
Absolutely. Proper grounding relies on consistent soil contact with the grounding electrode. In the rolling valley foothills around Stayton, rocky or variable soil can lead to high resistance on your grounding system. This can cause voltage irregularities, nuisance tripping of GFCI or AFCI breakers, and reduce protection from surges. An electrician should test your grounding electrode system's resistance and may need to augment it with additional rods to meet code.