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Vanguard Home and Commercial Maintenance
FAQs
What's involved in getting a permit for an electrical panel upgrade in Aiken County, and is it worth the hassle?
The permit process through the Aiken County Planning and Development Department ensures the work meets the current NEC 2023 code, which is a non-negotiable safety standard. As a Master Electrician licensed by the South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation, I handle all filings, scheduling, and inspections. This official record is crucial for home insurance and resale. Bypassing permits risks fines, invalidated insurance, and unsafe installations that an inspector would catch.
We lost all power and smell something burning near the panel. How fast can a Master Electrician get to our house in Graniteville?
Treat this as an immediate safety issue and call 911 first. For our response, a crew is typically dispatched from our staging near Graniteville Canal Park. Using US-1, we can be at most addresses in the historic district within that 5-8 minute window. Our priority is securing the home, identifying the fault—often a failed Federal Pacific breaker—and making a safe, temporary repair to restore essential power.
Our Graniteville Historic District home was built in 1966 and still has the original wiring. Why do our lights dim when the microwave and air conditioner run?
Your home's 60-year-old cloth-jacketed copper wiring, while once robust, simply lacks the capacity for today's high-amperage appliances. A 1966 electrical system was designed for about half the simultaneous load of a modern 2026 household. The dimming lights indicate voltage drop, a sign your 100-amp panel is overloaded. Upgrading the wiring and service capacity is the definitive fix to prevent overheating and potential fire hazards.
How should we prepare our Graniteville home's electrical system for summer brownouts or winter ice storms?
For summer peaks, ensure your air conditioning system is on a dedicated, properly sized circuit to prevent overloads. A professional tune-up can improve efficiency. For extended outages in any season, a permanently installed generator with an automatic transfer switch is the safest, most reliable solution. It keeps critical loads running and eliminates the dangers of using extension cords from a portable unit. Proper installation requires a permit from Aiken County.
We have overhead power lines coming to our house. Does that make our electrical service less reliable than underground lines?
Overhead service, common in the Graniteville area, is more exposed to weather, trees, and wildlife, which can lead to more frequent momentary outages. However, it is often easier and less expensive to repair. The key reliability factors are the condition of the masthead where the lines connect, the utility's line maintenance, and the integrity of your meter base. Proper masthead installation prevents water infiltration, a common source of corrosion and failure.
We live on a wooded lot near the Graniteville Canal. Could the trees be affecting our home's power quality?
Absolutely. The heavy tree canopy common in the rolling Piedmont can cause intermittent faults on overhead service lines, leading to flickering lights. Branches rubbing against lines create noise and can cause shorts. Furthermore, the rocky soil can challenge the effectiveness of your grounding electrode system, which is critical for safety and surge dissipation. An evaluation of your service mast, line clearance, and ground resistance is a wise proactive step.
Our smart TVs and computers in Graniteville keep getting reset by power flickers from Dominion Energy. What's causing this?
The Dominion Energy grid in our rolling Piedmont terrain is exposed to frequent lightning strikes, a primary cause of voltage spikes and momentary outages. These micro-surges are brutal on sensitive electronics. While utility-side issues exist, protecting your home requires a layered approach: whole-house surge protection at the main panel to clamp major spikes, and point-of-use protectors for individual devices. This is a standard recommendation for homes in our high-surge-risk area.
Our inspector said we have a Federal Pacific panel. Is our 1966, 100-amp electrical system safe for adding a heat pump or EV charger?
No, it is not. The Federal Pacific panel is a known fire hazard with breakers that can fail to trip during an overload. Even if the panel were safe, a 100-amp service from 1966 lacks the reserve capacity for a heat pump or Level 2 EV charger, each of which can require 30-50 amps alone. A full service upgrade to 200 amps and panel replacement is a mandatory first step for both safety and functionality.