Tag Archives: Troubleshooting

AFCI Breakers Prevent Fires, Increase Home Safety

Are arc fault circuit interrupters (AFCIs) worth the cost? Short answer: Absolutely.

When Wade Anderson awoke one day to find no electricity in his Sherwood, Oregon, bedroom, he traced it to a burned-out open wire — a fire hazard. He called an electrician to add a new circuit and install arc fault circuit interrupters, also known as AFCI, to his breakers.

“Had I installed AFCIs in that bedroom earlier, the bad circuit would have been revealed sooner, avoiding a close call on a fire,” the Angie’s List member says. “Arc faults are more likely as wiring ages, so AFCIs are a wise upgrade for older homes.”

Experts say AFCI breakers can prevent fire hazards by cutting off power in the breaker box as soon as they detect the “electric signature” — sharp spikes and drops in voltage — that indicate a fault. Arc faults occur when electricity discharges at unintended points, such as corroded or loose wires, creating dangerous sparks or excessive heat. The National Fire Protection Association says arcs are the most common cause of residential electrical fires.

Michael Johnston, executive director of standards and safety for the National Electrical Contractors Association, strongly recommends them for all homes, and installed several in his own home when he moved in, even though it was less than a decade old.

“It’s like having a policeman there constantly monitoring your system and stopping the arc as soon as it happens,” he says. “An AFCI breaker is designed to react within one-tenth of a second of an arcing event and open the circuit.”

Seth Silbaugh, owner of an electrical contracting company calls this an improvement over previous generations of breaker technology. “A loose connection can cause a fire, but it won’t trip a circuit breaker,” he says. “An AFCI can pick that up and cut it off.”

Arc fault breaker code changes

AFCI technology developed in the 1990s and slowly began to take hold in the National Electrical Code. New versions call for AFCI breakers in nearly all of the habitable areas of the house. Homes built prior to the NEC’s adoption of AFCI in the last decade aren’t required to have it, but Silbaugh says the code calls for AFCI breakers when adding new circuits or upgrades to the system.

A Panel Chad from Safe and Sound Electric Installed

Arc fault protection cost

Johnston says the cost of adding this work to older homes can vary widely, depending on the age of the electrical panel.

“The breaker itself costs about $40 and takes an hour or two to install four or five of them, unless there are troubleshooting problems,” he says. “So you might be looking at a few hundred dollars. But some older panels won’t accept the new AFCI devices, so you’d need to upgrade the panel.”

Silbaugh says he sometimes comes across this problem, and that panel upgrades can cost anywhere from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars. Johnston says in cases where panel upgrades aren’t feasible, device-based AFCI can be installed directly in outlets at a lower cost.

Silbaugh points out that AFCI can work in conjunction with ground fault circuit interrupter (GFCI) technology, and says this remains particularly important in bathrooms.

“GFCI protects the end user from electric shock,” he says. “But a circuit can be protected by both AFCI and GFCI at the same time.”

One lingering criticism claims that AFCI trips too easily, which Anderson echoes.

“They’re pretty sensitive,” he says. “A circular saw can trip them, which I’ve experienced.”

Silbaugh says AFCI circuits do tend to be more sensitive, especially in older houses such as Anderson’s 1968 home, but technology improvements have lowered that problem. “The newer ones are a lot better than the ones from even five or six years ago,” he says. “They’ll still trip on occasion if something like a vacuum or a treadmill creates an electric signature the AFCI interprets as a problem, but it’s not a reason not to put them in. There are certain inconveniences, but the safety benefits outweigh them.”

Source: AFCI Breakers Prevent Fires, Increase Home Safety | Angie’s List

Bottom line is if you’re looking for the #1 way to protect your families’ lives and your investment when it comes to electrical, Arc Fault breakers are what you’ll be looking to.  Contact Safe and Sound Electric for a complimentary estimate!

7 Electrical Safety Tips Homeowners Should Know

Learn how to identify the electrical safety hazards you can’t see before problems arise.

I often wonder what they would have thought of microwaves, entertainment centers, dishwashers and the armies of other gadgets we take for granted on a daily basis. But your home’s electrical system may have a few things going on that might shock you too. Enlighten yourself with these tips that can help you be a more aware homeowner and may alert you to dangerous electrical problems that need to be fixed by Safe and Sound Electric.

1. Throw your home a birthday party

For electrical safety reasons, it’s good to know how old your home is and to celebrate its birthday with an electrical safety inspection. Older homes weren’t built to handle the electrical load our contemporary lives carry. Knowing whether your home’s electrical system has been updated to safely handle all the electrical current your family uses is imperative.

2. Know your electric panel

Even as recently as the 1990s, faulty electrical panels were being installed in many new homes. Certain brands, including Federal Pacific, ITE Pushmatic, Zinsco and GTE/Sylvania, are no longer manufactured and pose electrical hazards that could lead to a fire. Your electric panel should never feel hot to the touch.

A hot electric panel points to a big problem. (Photo by Katelin Kinney)

3. Understand the breakers

These guys are your friends, even though you may find their interference irritating when they trip. They’re trying to tell you something, and it’s usually that you have too many appliances or gadgets connected to the same circuit. Reconfigure your appliances, and if the breakers keep tripping, get help from an electrician.

4. Make friends with your fire extinguisher

The only safe way to extinguish an electrical fire is with a fire-retardant chemical fire extinguisher. Never use water; it conducts electricity. Keep fire extinguishers on each level of your home, and know how to use them and when to replace them.

Having a fire extinguisher isn’t enough. Learn how to use it. (Photo by Katelin Kinney)

5. Feel your outlets

Place your hand on the outlets in your home. Warm or hot outlets point to trouble.

A warm outlet could mean one of several dangerous situations is brewing: an electrical load on this circuit is too high, wiring is melting, wiring isn’t up to code or is loose. Also, note if the outlets don’t hold plugs, or if the outlet itself seems loose on the wall.

Replace any two-pronged outlets with newer, grounded three-pronged outlets. Any outlet near water should be switched to code-correct GFCI outlets. Call an electrician to handle these requests.

6. Keep an eye on the lights

Flickering lights could mean you need to repair or replace your electrical panel, or you have too many appliances plugged into one circuit. Don’t ignore this issue.

7. Ground older appliances

Older appliances could have grounding issues that might put you at risk for a shock. Ensure all of your appliances have three-pronged plugs that can properly connect to a grounded outlet. Any kitchen appliances with just two-pronged plugs should be replaced. If the outlets aren’t grounded, they should be replaced, and a new circuit should be installed.

Electrical work is inherently dangerous. Professional electricians receive years of training and on-the-job experience before the state grants them a license. Use discretion when attempting your own electrical work. To make sure all the electrical systems in your home are safe, up to code and working as they should, hire a trusted electrician to handle the job.

Warm outlets? Flickering lights? These signal electricity problems that you should have a licensed electrician check out. Be an aware homeowner with these tips.

Source: 7 Electrical Safety Tips Homeowners Should Know | Angies List

Six Tips for Diagnosing Dimming or Flickering Lights at Buildings

In diagnosing the cause of flickering or dimming lights at a building the following diagnostic questions can help narrow down the cause of the trouble.

  1. Is the dimming light problem happening in just your building or do neighbors see the same problem at exactly the same time? If your neighbors are seeing flickering or dimming lights too, chances are the problem is in the electrical supply network or possibly at local electrical wiring in your neighborhood or its power transformer. If your neighborhood often loses electrical power contact Safe and Sound Electric to install a backup power generator.
  2. Is the dimming problem showing up in the whole building or just parts of it? If all lights in the house dim then the problem is probably in the electrical panel or at the service entry cabling to your building. The electrician will look for a problem in the electrical panel, at the main breaker, at the service entry wiring connections or at the SEC wiring itself, including the two hot wires and the service neutral wire. But see the exception in step 4 below.
  3. Is the dimming or flickering light problem associated with circuits in just half of the electrical panel? Depending on electrical panel layout, damage to one panel bus can cause failures or odd behavior on electrical circuits connected to that panel bus.
  4. Is the dimming light problem associated with the operation of a single, specific appliance or motor? This is an exception to the case described in step 2 in that all lights may dim when there is a developing failure in a single major appliance such as an air conditioner compressor motor. Such motors can draw very high amps (current) for just a moment when the motor is starting. If the current surge is very brief, no circuit breaker may trip but the load may be enough to dim all the incandescent lights that are on or all fixtures in just part of the building, depending on how the appliance circuit is wired in the electrical panel. (Fluorescent lights probably won’t dim). If the problem never occurs when the circuit to that appliance has been turned off you’ve probably found the trouble. If the problem is traced to a specific appliance but is intermittent, other variations in conditions such as temperature, humidity, vibration, or moving around of a loose wire may explain that inconsistency.
  5. Is the dimming or flickering light trouble showing up on just a single circuit? In this case we suspect a faulty circuit breaker or bad connection in the circuit. Some circuit breaker brands are particularly prone to failure such as FPE Stab-Lok and Zinsco-Sylvania. In this case the problem may ultimately show up on more circuits in the same building, depending on building age and circuit usage levels and other conditions.
  6. Is the dimming or flickering light showing up just at some fixtures or appliances? A likely cause of this problem is a failing appliance or motor that is drawing abnormally high current as we cited in step 3. But sometimes the problem may occur only at lights or appliances plugged-in electrically “downstream” from a specific electrical circuit, or at lights operated by a specific switch. In this case we suspect the trouble is not the appliance itself but in connectors within the receptacle or switch or immediately “upstream” (electrically) from it. Some receptacle and switch types such as older push-in back-wired devices are more likely to have loose or failing electrical connectors with age and usage.

Try plugging in the light fixture or appliance at a different place on a different electrical circuit in the home. If the bad behavior continues then the trouble is in the light or appliance itself.

Watch out: for these safety hazards and take the immediate safety measures listed here. Start by turning off any electrical appliance or circuit that is misbehaving. Call for help from Safe and Sound Electric.

  • If your home’s branch circuits (receptacles and lighting) are wired with aluminum wire, flickering, dimming lights or even sparking may show up on just one circuit but the hazard is building-wide and significant. Turn off the misbehaving circuit and have the electrical system inspected and repaired by Safe and Sound Electric who is familiar with the hazards of and proper repairs for aluminum wiring.
  • When you can trace flickering or dimming lights to a single appliance, un-plug it and stop using it until it can be inspected and repaired. If the appliance is a unit such as central air or a heat pump, switch it off at the electrical panel.
  • When you trace flickering or dimming lights to a specific electrical circuit, turn that circuit off at the electrical panel until Safe and Sound Electric can inspect and repair the problem.
  • Call Safe and Sound Electric to help!