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FAQs
Does the flat, coastal soil near the Botanical Garden affect our home's electrical grounding?
The flat, often damp coastal plain soil in Larchmont is actually conducive to good grounding, which is essential for safety. However, it can accelerate corrosion on underground grounding electrode connections if they are not properly installed and protected. During an inspection, we verify the integrity of your ground rod and its connection to the panel's neutral bus bar to ensure fault currents have a safe path to earth, as required by code.
Why do our lights flicker and smart devices reboot during storms in Norfolk? Is it our wiring or Dominion Energy?
Flickering during coastal storms is often a grid issue. Dominion Energy's infrastructure can experience faults from frequent lightning strikes and high winds, causing momentary surges or sags. However, aging connections in a 1963 home can amplify these problems. To protect sensitive 2026 electronics, a whole-house surge protector installed at your main panel is a critical defense, clamping damaging surges before they reach your devices.
Do I need a permit from the city to replace my electrical panel, and why does it matter?
Yes, a permit from the Norfolk Department of Planning and Development is legally required for a panel replacement. This isn't bureaucracy; it's a vital safety check. The inspection ensures the work complies with the 2020 NEC and Virginia DPOR licensing standards, verifying that hazards like Federal Pacific panels are correctly removed and new installations can handle future loads. As your electrician, we manage this entire process to guarantee your system is safe and legally compliant.
I smell something burning from an outlet. How fast can an electrician get to my house near the Botanical Garden?
Treat any burning smell as an urgent electrical fire risk—shut off power at the breaker if safe to do so. From our base near Norfolk Botanical Garden, we prioritize emergency calls and can typically navigate via I-64 to reach most Larchmont homes within that critical 12-18 minute window. Immediate dispatch is standard for fire hazards to prevent damage to your home's wiring structure.
We have overhead power lines coming to our house. What should I look for to know if the mast or service drop is damaged?
Visually inspect the masthead (the pipe where lines enter your home) for rust, sagging, or separation from the roof. Look at the service drop cables themselves for fraying or weather damage. In Larchmont's older neighborhoods, these components from a 1963 installation are often at the end of their service life. Any visible damage should be addressed immediately by a licensed electrician, as it's a point of failure that can cause a power loss or fire hazard.
We have an old Federal Pacific panel and want an EV charger. Is our 100-amp service from 1963 safe for this upgrade?
Your current setup presents two major safety barriers. First, Federal Pacific panels are a known fire hazard due to breakers that can fail to trip during an overload. Second, adding a Level 2 EV charger to a 100-amp service from 1963 is not feasible; it would require a full service upgrade to 200 amps. We must replace the hazardous panel first, then upgrade the service entrance capacity to meet modern NEC standards for EV charging and heat pumps.
How should I prepare my Norfolk home's electrical system for summer brownouts or winter ice storms?
Prepare for peak summer AC loads and winter ice by ensuring your electrical panel connections are tight and your system is not overloaded. For extended outages, a properly installed generator with a transfer switch is the safest solution. Given the high surge risk here, integrating whole-house surge protection with your backup plan is also wise to protect appliances from voltage spikes when grid power is restored.
Our lights dim when the fridge kicks on. Is our 1963-era wiring in Larchmont too old for our new appliances?
That's a classic sign of an overloaded system. Your home's original cloth-jacketed copper wiring is now 63 years old. While the copper itself is still conductive, the insulation becomes brittle and can't safely handle the sustained loads of modern 2026 kitchens and entertainment centers. A 100-amp panel, standard for 1963, is often insufficient for today's simultaneous demands, leading to voltage drop and overheating at connections.