Monday, May 5, 2014

How to Reduce Holiday Energy Use

Becoming more energy efficient not only helps the environment, but it also definitely does some good for your wallet, and nowadays, everyone was to know how to save.

As we search for ways to decrease our energy use, it’s not uncommon to wonder what energy efficient measures will actually save you money.

We all know energy use skyrockets around the holidays. This season, taking a few extra steps to reduce your energy usage can mean big savings in the long run.

Switch your twinkle lights to LED lights.
A 2003 study conducted by the U.S. Department of Energy determined that Americans consume about 2,220 GWh (gigawatt hours) of electricity each holiday season by using standard incandescent holiday lights.
The same study also found that if 20 percent of American households switched to LED lights, they’d save 440 GWh of electricity during the estimated 30-day holiday season.

Insulate your home.
Heating and cooling can account for up to 44 percent of household energy use. But did you know: proper insulation slows the rate at which heat escapes during the cold winter months?

Take a look at your insulation and plug up any leaks or cracks in your house. You can also go the extra step by replacing windows with more energy-efficient models!

Use your fireplace & burn better wood.
When the cold does strike, keep heat in by taking advantage of your fireplace and cozying up to a crackling fire! You can save money by avoiding turning on your heat AND save a tree by burning some all-natural, man-made logs instead.

Java-Logs are the greenest option. Made entirely from coffee grounds, these logs are 100 percent natural and their ashes are compostable. And when you’re not using the fireplace, close the flue and block the fireplace to prevent heat from escaping.

Always remember, if you have any questions, feel free to contact us.

Source: http://powergenerationinc.com/how-to-reduce-holiday-energy-use/

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Reading Through The April Employment Report

You can access it (a 39p PDF) here.

The number EleBlog likes to look at is the U-6 employment figure — on page 27, table A-15. It’s more inclusive than the “headline” number, even though it is subject to the same influences as all of the other BLS data (i.e., it’s probably wrong).

For April 2014, the U-6 was 12.3% (as seasonally adjusted)

It was 12.7% in January 2014 — and 13.9% in April 2013.

It’s probably reasonable to think that this number indicates the US economy has provided more jobs in the past year. However, the decrease from 13.9% to 12.3% might be questioned.

And the idea that the economy did not grow (or declined), as measured by the GDP, in Q1 . . . and yet the U-6 declined by 0.4 percentage points — is hard to reconcile.

Source: http://electricalcontractor.com/?p=13787

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Sunday, May 4, 2014

New Ways To Save Money

There are other ways you can save money in addition to energy efficient lighting. Businesses can also get a rebate from APS and SRP for installing programmable thermostats and vending machine controls. Call 602-943-6120 for more information on these money saving options. Need an Electrician? Call 602-943-6120 or schedule online atselectricinc.com/electrician ATS Electric, Inc.

Source: http://blog.atselectricinc.com/2014/04/new-ways-to-save-money/

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When do I need a home electrical service change ? Broward Electrician

Bob Frank, owner of Perfect Electric and Air Services, in discussing in this video tips on how to indentify the need for an electrical service change for your home. There are factors that increase electrical hazards and potential exposure to serious electrical issues that homeowners, at least most of them, wouldn’t be able to spot. Perfect [...]

Source: http://www.perfectelectricrepairs.com/2013/when-do-i-need-a-home-electrical-service-change-broward-electrician.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=when-do-i-need-a-home-electrical-service-change-broward-electrician

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Energy Eye™ HVAC Energy Management System

We are Kauai’s only: Factory Certified Installer Certified Technical Service Provider Distributor Energy Eye™ is helping hotels save from 15% to 35% on their guest room air conditioning expenses – GUARANTEED!   What is Energy Eye? It is an energy management system designed for hotel/resort rooms, offices, and condominiums to control your AC cooling based on room occupancy. […]

Source: http://www.blueskyelectric.net/blog/energy-eye-hvac-energy-management-system/

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EV Charging Stations

We believe the future of clean transportation lies with electric vehicles. Here’s an example of a charging station we recently installed.  

Source: http://www.enlighten-electric.com/2012/03/ev-charging-stations/

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Light Up Your Spring Outdoor Areas!

Did you know that there are many different types of outdoor lighting available right now? Maybe you have flower gardens that you are ready to get started and you'd like to spruce their appearance a bit? A string of low-voltage lights looks great along walkways in flower beds after dark and makes walking along the pathway easier as well. You may like the option of solar lights that charge during the day by the sun's rays and use the stored energy at night to light the light.

...

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Source: http://electrical.about.com/b/2014/04/08/light-up-your-spring-outdoor-areas.htm

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Camping Connection Checklist...Is Your Camper Safe?

Camper ConnectionsBefore you head out to the great outdoors for a weekend of camping bliss and relaxation, check your camper connections. Let's start the trip with working trailer lights and go from there. Make sure the tail lights, truning siganls, brake lights, and license plate marker lights are functioning properly. Also check the power trailer brakes before beginning your weekend getaway.

...

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Source: http://electrical.about.com/b/2014/04/10/camping-connection-checklist-is-your-camper-safe.htm

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Time of Use Electric Meters

Our family has taken advantage of “time of use” electric meters since they were first introduce by SRP many years ago. These meters track when electricity is used and charge a higher rate during “peak time” and a lower rate during “off-peak time”. Since a utility company has to build a system to deliver enough […]

Source: http://blog.atselectricinc.com/2013/02/time-of-use-electric-meters-17/

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When to Replace Smoke Alarms

 When to Replace Smoke Alarms  In the January-February edition of the NFPA Journal, a publication of the National Fire Protection Association - The Authority on Fire, Electrical & Building Safety, writer Amy Lebeau wrote an article entitled "Close to Home - A friends near miss, and a viral challenge to improve smoke-alarm awareness".   In Amy's NFPA article she tells a story of her friend Brook, who recently had a serious fire in her home. And Brook's 2 children smelled the smoke first and got their mom, grandmother and their baby brother out of the house.   The scarier part, was that when Amy heard Brook tell the story, Amy asked Brook if she heard smoke detectors go off in the home, and Brook said, "no". Amy goes on to say that Brook and her husband thought they had adequate coverage with smoke detectors all over the house, in the necessary spots. What they didn't realize is that they did not work.   Smoke detectors need to be changed at minimum every 10 years. A smoke alarms ability to detect smoke becomes less reliable over the years, making it more likely that it won't respond when its needed most!   Amy Lebeau then polled her friends to see if any of them knew about smoke detectors life span of 10 years. None of them did, they were all over the map.   Amy suggests the following. 1. Know the importance of testing your smoke alarms monthly. 2. Have an interconnected smoke alarm system in the home, meaning if one detector alarms the presence of smoke, they all alarm. 3. Have both ionization and photo-electric type smoke alarms, this means having two different detection methods for redundancy and accuracy. 4. Replace them every 10 years minimum. 5. Have a detailed home fire escape plan.   At Cooper Electric we specialize in providing our customers with adequate smoke detector coverage. Our residential department can help you with questions and product information. Add this detail on your next electrical service call, while we are already in your home, to provide you with great value!  

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Copyright © Cooper Electric [When to Replace Smoke Alarms ], All Right Reserved. 2014.

Source: http://cooper-electric.net/replace-smoke-alarms/

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Saturday, May 3, 2014

“No Bad Lettuce” Theory of Management

I was sitting in a restaurant one day eating a salad for lunch. This salad was full of wilted lettuce and inedible chunks from the center of the head. It really made me quite disappointed with the restaurant and they never did get much of my business after that. Why was a little bad lettuce […]

Source: http://blog.atselectricinc.com/2014/03/no-bad-lettuce-theory-of-management-10/

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DIY: Doing electrical work on your own?

“That looks easy to fix,”  you might say, when you see a problem with your electrical wiring.  Many people enjoy doing their own work on their homes.  If they have the skills and tools, the DIY project can be very rewarding.  It’s a great way to save money and feels good to have done it […]

Source: http://www.blueskyelectric.net/blog/dyi-doing-electrical-work-on-your-own/

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Solar Manifes-two

Due to the increasing number of individuals who have contacted us regarding our pages/posts and those who have chosen to bookmark our website for future reference. We felt it was necessary to add new material to help keep the content fresh and to keep people commenting and sharing which was the original reason we set [...]

Source: http://www.enlighten-electric.com/2012/03/solar-manifes-two/

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Switch to energy efficient lighting in your business and save Money!

Did you know if you change the lights in your business to more energy efficient fixtures, APS and SRP will pay for a portion of the project? We provide a free audit and consultation with no obligation. You have nothing to lose, except energy costs! Let us help you save money! Call 602-943-6120 to get […]

Source: http://blog.atselectricinc.com/2014/03/switch-to-energy-efficient-lighting-in-your-business-and-save-money/

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Reading Through The April Employment Report

You can access it (a 39p PDF) here.

The number EleBlog likes to look at is the U-6 employment figure — on page 27, table A-15. It’s more inclusive than the “headline” number, even though it is subject to the same influences as all of the other BLS data (i.e., it’s probably wrong).

For April 2014, the U-6 was 12.3% (as seasonally adjusted)

It was 12.7% in January 2014 — and 13.9% in April 2013.

It’s probably reasonable to think that this number indicates the US economy has provided more jobs in the past year. However, the decrease from 13.9% to 12.3% might be questioned.

And the idea that the economy did not grow (or declined), as measured by the GDP, in Q1 . . . and yet the U-6 declined by 0.4 percentage points — is hard to reconcile.

Source: http://electricalcontractor.com/?p=13787

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California Wineries Don’t Need Pricey ‘Green’ Power (1.6 or 7.1 cent/kWh?)

Bill Roberts, economist for the Bay Area Economic Forum, warned in a 2007 study on the municipalization of local power purchases and generation in California:

If Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) operates any retained generation and Sonoma Clean Power purchases 100% of its power supply in the competitive market, Sonoma cannot avoid higher average electricity rates than PG&E unless it subsidizes rates (or someone wins the gamble of ‘beating the market’). [page 13, paraphrased for clarity].

Sonoma Clean Power (SCP) officials and advocates were whooping it up with recent news that some 94 percent of its electricity customers had “chosen” to drop service from investor-owned utility Pacific Gas and Electric. Instead electricity customers would be transferred to its new municipal electric utility beginning in May (see Energy News Data, March 28). But Sonoma County electric ratepayers may want to think a second time about automatically “opting in” to the program.

Background

Sonoma County is located north of San Francisco Bay and enjoys frontage along the Pacific Ocean. Sonoma County is considered part of California’s wine country including Napa and Mendocino Counties.

Sonoma Clean Power is a new municipal electric utility created under the Community Choice Aggregation (CCA) law in California. This allows cities to disconnect from having to buy power from PG&E and purchase their own power, or build their own new clean power plants. All customers are automatically transferred to the new city owned-utility unless they want to choose to opt out. PG&E would continue to handle billings, maintenance, and transmission and distribution of electricity.

The justification for creating Sonoma Clean Power is that it can deliver cheaper, cleaner power to customers than PG&E.However, PG&E can supply electricity to Sonoma County mainly from the Mt. Diablo Nuclear Power Plant and hydroelectric power plants both of which deliver very cheap and totally clean power already. A Fukushima nuclear plant failure is nearly impossible at Mt. Diablo due to its design.

Sonoma Clean Power vs. 1.6 cent/kWh Clean Nuclear Power

Nuclear power from the Mt. Diablo plant is produced at a wholesale price of 1.6 cents per kilowatt-hour, an unbeatably low price. By comparison, three cities in Southern California just bought solar power from Silverado Solar for 7.1 cents per kilowatt-hour, excluding the expensive transmission costs associated with green power.

The San Francisco North Bay Business Journal estimated that Sonoma Clean Power could possibly produce electricity at about the same rate as PG&E but it would include a higher percentage of clean power, which it arguably doesn’t need.

Sonoma Clean Power High Estimate: $0.094 per kWh (33% clean power by 2020)
Sonoma Clean Power Low Estimate: $0.092 per kWh (33% clean power by 2020)
PG&E Clean Power: $0.096 per kWh (20% clean power as of 2013)

Source: North Bay Business Journal, April 15, 2013

No Power Plants Will Be Built in Sonoma Basin Smog Trap

Pricey, clean power is often justified in California where the topography creates air basins that trap smog.  California has 9 air basins that trap smog, including the small and narrow Sonoma Basin around the City of Santa Rosa. But Sonoma County enjoys comparatively clean air quality with airborne particulate levels way below the national average (city-data.com). The City of Santa Rosa has one of the lowest levels of ozone in the U.S., according to a 2007 survey in Business Week. None of either Sonoma Clean Power’s proposed future power plants nor any of PG&E’s existing power plants are located inside the Sonoma Air Basin nor would they contribute to trapping smog.

Switching to a new municipal electric utility doesn’t seem to be meeting much resistance in liberal Sonoma County, 75 percent of which voted for Pres. Obama in 2008 and 71 percent in 2012.

According to Stanford University Graduate School of Business the Levelized Cost of Crystalline Rooftop Solar Power is 24 cents per kilowatt hour excluding tax incentives, reverse metering costs and any reclassification of transmission costs as distribution by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC). Reverse metering entails having to reengineer the electric grid to run two ways, both to and from its customers.

Clean Power is Socialized Power

To make clean power economically feasible its higher cost has to be socialized over a large number of electric ratepayers, taxpayers, or shifted to large commercial users, such as California’s Cap and Trade emissions program does. Clean power is socialized power.

But some Sonomans might reply: “what do we care if clean energy is socialized, as long as we can privatize the profits and socialize the costs onto other PG&E or Sonoma Clean Power customers, while creating local jobs?”

To prevent cost shifting the CPUC would tack a 2-cent per kilowatt-hour surcharge on all electricity ratepayers Sonoma County. Additionally, a $10 per month surcharge on rooftop solar homeowners has recently been enacted under State Assembly Bil AB 327 to deal with the cost-shifting problem.

Certainly, the City of Santa Rosa won’t oppose higher-priced clean power because it tacks a 5% Utility Users Tax on electricity bills to feed its precarious general fund.

A county-run municipal electricity utility cannot make profits or enjoy clean power tax credits or tax write-offs. Power plants built by PG&E can be financed by both taxable debt and equity (stocks) while SCP can avail itself only of tax-exempt bonds. Tax exempt bonds are a potential advantage to SCP. But low-interest bonds also mean that SCP ratepayers would have to bear 100% of any default on those bonds compared to PG&E that can shift some risk to stockholders.

Sonoma Clean Power Plays ”How to Beat the Market”

Sonoma Clean Power is a gamble that it can buy cheap power or build power plants that generate cheap, clean power. If SCP builds power plants it incurs the risk that the power cannot be sold at the cost to produce it. Alternatively, if Sonoma buys power in the spot market that would expose it to the risk of market price volatility. This risk could be hedged or insured but at an extra cost.

Bill Roberts, economist for the Bay Area Economic Forum, in his 2007 study on the municipalization of local power purchases and generation, warned:

“If PG&E operates any retained generation and Sonoma Clean Power purchases 100% of its power supply in the competitive market, Sonoma cannot avoid higher average electricity rates than PG&E unless it subsidizes rates (or someone wins the gamble of ‘beating the market’).” [page 13, paraphrased for clarity].

To beat the market SCP must build its own power plants. SCP wants to build a new geothermal power plant nearby in The Geysers, the world’s largest geothermal energy field.

But tapping new geothermal power is a very risky venture, as Gov. Jerry Brown found out with his planned Bottle Rock Geothermal Power Plant after he left the Governor’s office in the 1970’s. The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California ended up having to pay off $282 million in bonds to bail Brown out of a political fiasco. In a long, complicated story, the City of Santa Rosa in Sonoma County ended up with cheap geothermal power partly paid for by water ratepayers in Southern California. But the next time Sonoma County residents will not be so lucky and will have to pay for any power plant fiascos.

Sonoma Clean Power will soon have to bring a concrete proposal for a clean power plant before the county for review. Any clean power plant proposal would be entirely superfluous in “blue sky” Sonoma County. By all indications the wine country of Sonoma County is going to end up drunk on unneeded green power. If it doesn’t make economic sense upon independent review, it remains to be seen how many Sonoma County residents may want to reconsider their gamble on municipal clean power, including exercising their “choice” to opt out of the program and return to PG&E as a customer.

Source: http://www.masterresource.org/2014/04/cal-wine-country-bad-power/

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“No Bad Lettuce” Theory of Management

I was sitting in a restaurant one day eating a salad for lunch. This salad was full of wilted lettuce and inedible chunks from the center of the head. It really made me quite disappointed with the restaurant and they never did get much of my business after that. Why was a little bad lettuce […]

Source: http://blog.atselectricinc.com/2014/03/no-bad-lettuce-theory-of-management-10/

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The Green Benefits of Food Globalization: Markets at Work

“High-yield agriculture and long-distance trade have long delivered a similar outcome—more abundant and affordable food with reduced environmental impact—on a global scale…. So prepare your meal from the most affordable food you can find to do both your wallet and the planet a favor.”

The lessons of history can be very eloquent, if only we are willing to take the time to learn them. In a 2008 National Geographic article, journalist Charles Mann discusses how soil management policies in communist China led to the creation of terrace agriculture in unsuitable conditions, the cutting down of trees, and the planting of grain on steep slopes. The main results were increased soil erosion and soil depletion.

Daring to challenge official edicts, some villagers replanted the steepest and most erosion-prone third of their land with grass and trees, covered another third with harvestable orchards, and concentrated their crops on the remaining lower flat plots that had been enriched by the soil washed down from the hillsides.

As Mann tells his readers, by making better use of their limited supplies of fertilizer on the best land, the dissident villagers were able to increase yields to such an extent that they more than made up for the land no longer under cultivation and in the end managed to deliver both increased output and reduced environmental impact.

High-yield agriculture and long-distance trade have long delivered a similar outcome—more abundant and affordable food with reduced environmental impact—on a global scale. As the Marxist theorist Karl Kautsky observed in 1899 in his classic On the Agrarian Question,

As long as any rural economy is self-sufficient it has to produce everything which it needs, irrespective of whether the soil is suitable or not. Grain has to be cultivated on infertile, stony and steeply sloping ground as well as on rich soils.

In time though, the development of better production areas such as the Canadian Prairies removed the need to keep producing grain on poorer soils, “and where circumstances were favorable it was taken off the land and replaced by other types of agricultural production” such as orchards, beef cattle, and dairy cows. Exporting food items from production locations where water was abundant to consumers living in regions where it wasn’t similarly removed the need to drain surface waters and aquifers in many drier parts of the world.

Food Miles” Constructivism

Unfortunately, in our carbon emissions-obsessed era, local food activists (or locavores) have embraced the notion of “food miles,” or the distance food items travel from farms to consumers, as the be all and end all of the environmental impact of agricultural production. As has been repeatedly and rigorously documented in numerous life cycle assessment (LCA) studies, however, the distance traveled by food is a worthless indicator of sustainable development.

Among other issues, producing food typically requires (much) more energy than moving it around, especially when significant amounts of heating and/or cold-protection technologies, irrigation water, fertilizers, pesticides, and other inputs are required to grow things in one region, but not in another. Reducing food miles typically means a greater environmental footprint given the use of additional resources in less desirable locations.

Another issue is that the distance travelled by food matters less than the mode of transportation. For instance, shipping food halfway around the world on a container ship often has a smaller footprint per item carried than a short trip by car to a grocery store to buy a small quantity of these items.

Technology to the Rescue

Advances in transportation and conservation technologies have also historically increased the importation of perishable food items produced at different latitudes and decreased local food production and storage, in the process delivering greater freshness, lower costs, and reduced energy consumption.

Importing New Zealand apples in the northern hemisphere in April rather than preserving local apples picked in September in cold storage for several months, for example, has advantages. Not only is freshness improved, spoilage is reduced. And storage costs, mainly the need to maintain higher than normal CO2 concentrations, lower than ambient temperatures to inhibit spoilage, or higher than ambient temperatures to prevent freezing, are avoided.

Conclusion

While agricultural markets are not perfect, due to numerous subsidies and barriers to trade, market prices factor in the environmental impact of food production by including the additional costs from less desirable production locals.

So ditch locavorism. Prepare your meal from the most affordable food you can find to do both your wallet and the planet a favor.

——————

Pierre Desrochers is Associate Professor of Geography (University of Toronto Mississauga); Associate Researcher at the Montreal Economic Institute; and co-author of The Locavore’s Dilemma. In Praise of the 10,000-mile Diet (PublicAffairs, 2012). Dr. Desrochers posts at MasterResource can be found here.

Source: http://www.masterresource.org/2014/05/the-green-benefits-of-food-globalization/

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Friday, May 2, 2014

Make Your Own Power?

If you've ever wondered if there is a choice to powering your home or lessening your electric or heating bills through an alternative power source, these articles may be the starting point. Wind power, solar power and other forms of everyday free access power-generating supplies can be used to make power for your home in order to supplement the utility company feed that you currently have. Are you ready for an alternative power source?

...

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Source: http://electrical.about.com/b/2014/03/15/make-your-own-power.htm

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The Risk of Federal Pacific - FPE - Panels

 The Risk of Federal Pacific   FPE   Panels

Circuit Breakers Defined

A circuit breaker is defined as an electrical switch, designed to protect an electrical circuit from damage caused by an overload or short circuit. A circuit breaker is meant to detect a fault condition of these types and interrupt current flow by "tripping".

FPE Circuit Breakers

The problem with FPE Stab-Lok circuit breakers is that when an unsafe condition, such as an overload or short circuit occurs, the FPE breakers fails to "trip" which is what a circuit breaker is designed to do in an electrical system.

Federal Pacific Hazards

This hazard worsens for double pole breakers. Double pole breakers are used on higher load circuits, such as for a clothes dryer. Under certain conditions it is possible for one leg of these circuits to attempt to trip the breaker, resulting in a jammed breaker which at minimum will afterward not trip under any load condition, or worse yet cause a high risk failure.

federal pacific breakers 300x269 The Risk of Federal Pacific   FPE   Panels

The FPE Dilemma

Although documentation of persistent hazards, and real life loss exist, there are still individuals that chose to ignore the warning signs. For example, some people try assuming a position that the "since the home has not burned to the ground in the last 25 years, how could someone predict that it will". Well, despite what some people postulate even with proof of the contrary, that FPE panels are hazards, this still can be a bone of contention. At Cooper Electric, we want our customers to be aware of any existing hazards.

FPE panels which are found in existing houses, 25 years and older, can/have burned homes down. As recently as, August of 2012 a Federal Pacific Electric Panel started a fire that burned a home down in the Wyoming Neighborhood of Cincinnati. The structure caught fire at the FPE panel in the garage of the home on Chisholm Trail and damage was estimated at $240,000. The home was over 25 years old.

FPE use

FPE panels were popularly used in home construction in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. The US Consumer Product Safety Commission has deemed them prone to failures, but has not recalled them. However, FPE had their UL Listings revoked in the 1980s.

Furthermore, incompetent handymen who install used FPE circuit breakers as band-aid fixes to replace failed FPE circuit breakers are not solving a more complex problem of the entire panel itself.

The variables of the conditions of the circuit breakers, how much load the circuit will be under, and IF the breaker will trip... all become part of the RISK that you are taking on with an FPE panel. The best solution for an FPE circuit breaker, is to replace the entire panel. A new panel from a proven manufacturer, who are still in busienss and have not been in litigation nor class action lawsuits for the lack of safety with their product, such as Federal Pacific Electric. Check out Inspectapedia for info.

At Cooper Electric the panels and breakers we install have a Lifetime Manufacturers Warranty, and our workmanship for the installation of the panel is backed with a 10 year warranty.

Information on FPE Stab-Lok Panels

For additional information on Federal Pacific FPE Hazards


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Source: http://cooper-electric.net/the-risk-of-federal-pacific-fpe-panels/

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Using Wall Lights To Highlight Your Home’s Decor

If you have filled your San Gabriel Valley home with treasures and artifacts that you would love to display to guests and visitors, perhaps the installation of some well-placed wall lights could be the solution to all your problems. With a number of unusual and attractive designs available, lights that are installed on the walls of your home could be very beneficial in accentuating a picture, fireplace, nook, plant or other architectural element.

But why are wall lights so useful in highlighting the decorative features of our home? For one, they are known for being highly suited to the provision ambient lighting, which looks nice but isn’t overly useful for completing tasks by. For two, the way in which light is cast out from these fixtures is perfect for illuminating decorative elements that are placed on or around the walls of your home.

In the bathroom, it is essential that you have proper lighting installed by your San Gabriel Valley Lighting electrician, so that you can complete the daily tasks of shaving and applying makeup. Wall sconces, when fitted with the proper globes, are highly effective at casting a more natural appearing illumination across the space. They also avoid the creation of dark shadows, which can make a person appear tired or unwell.

In the dining room, wall lights are used to provide that finishing touch by adding an understated illumination to the walls (which are often left in shadow by ceiling fixtures). They are quite useful in making a space feel bright and cozy rather than dark and dingy, which makes for a much more pleasant dining experience.

In the living room, the correct sort of illumination is essential for setting the mood of your ‘relaxation space’. Wall sconces are widely used in these areas for drawing attention to particular elements of the room, such as a fireplace or a picture, and they are also suitable for lighting around the television without casting an annoying glare across the screen.

In the hallway, it is important that you get the amount of light right, as these rooms are renowned for being the darkest areas of the home. Well-spaced wall lights will effortlessly provide adequate illumination that really opens the space up and banishes those dark corners.

 

Source: http://www.accurateelectricalservices.com/CA-Electrician/lighting/wall-lights-highlight-homes-decor

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Time of Use Electric Meters

Our family has taken advantage of “time of use” electric meters since they were first introduce by SRP many years ago. These meters track when electricity is used and charge a higher rate during “peak time” and a lower rate during “off-peak time”. Since a utility company has to build a system to deliver enough […]

Source: http://blog.atselectricinc.com/2013/02/time-of-use-electric-meters-17/

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About Sensor-Based Remote Monitoring Of Folks Age 75+ — In Their Homes

Laurie Orlov’s “Aging in Place Technology Watch” blog is always — and I mean ALWAYS — worth a read. The intersection between her “watch” and electrical contractors may not be obvious . . . but if a huge market for what she discusses below (and in many other posts) ever does develop, someone is going to have to do an awful lot of installation work.

Consider how many baby boomers there are (76 million or so) . . . and how they all seem obsessed with living forever.

From a recent post:

Sensor-based remote monitoring of vulnerable seniors has long been a very good idea. That is clearest when it is viewed from the vantage point of caregivers – professionals or family. But in 2014, let us consider: is remote monitoring a product – or is it becoming a feature of a larger social wellness solution?

For the 75+ age group – the Real Seniors, who may not have tablets or smart phones, some of the frailest may truly need remote monitoring. But moving forward, the sensible solution to their isolation and safety risk may be as much social as sensing.

And we must ask, will remote monitoring sensors stay plugged in and useful unless they are a feature of a larger wellness and social offering?

Source: http://electricalcontractor.com/?p=13777

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Tips: Hiring the right electrician.

How do you know your hiring the right electrician?

Source: http://www.blueskyelectric.net/blog/tips-hiring-the-right-electrician/

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Construction estimates, quotes, work orders & statements

I’ve been getting questions lately about the documentation I provide during my electrical construction projects, so here is a guide to site surveys, estimates, quotes, […]

Licensed Electrician Robert Monk
Construction estimates, quotes, work orders & statements
Copyright Robert Monk, 2012

Source: http://www.phillylicensedelectrician.com/construction-estimates-quotes-work-orders-statements/

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California Wineries Don’t Need Pricey ‘Green’ Power (1.6 or 7.1 cent/kWh?)

Bill Roberts, economist for the Bay Area Economic Forum, warned in a 2007 study on the municipalization of local power purchases and generation in California:

If Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) operates any retained generation and Sonoma Clean Power purchases 100% of its power supply in the competitive market, Sonoma cannot avoid higher average electricity rates than PG&E unless it subsidizes rates (or someone wins the gamble of ‘beating the market’). [page 13, paraphrased for clarity].

Sonoma Clean Power (SCP) officials and advocates were whooping it up with recent news that some 94 percent of its electricity customers had “chosen” to drop service from investor-owned utility Pacific Gas and Electric. Instead electricity customers would be transferred to its new municipal electric utility beginning in May (see Energy News Data, March 28). But Sonoma County electric ratepayers may want to think a second time about automatically “opting in” to the program.

Background

Sonoma County is located north of San Francisco Bay and enjoys frontage along the Pacific Ocean. Sonoma County is considered part of California’s wine country including Napa and Mendocino Counties.

Sonoma Clean Power is a new municipal electric utility created under the Community Choice Aggregation (CCA) law in California. This allows cities to disconnect from having to buy power from PG&E and purchase their own power, or build their own new clean power plants. All customers are automatically transferred to the new city owned-utility unless they want to choose to opt out. PG&E would continue to handle billings, maintenance, and transmission and distribution of electricity.

The justification for creating Sonoma Clean Power is that it can deliver cheaper, cleaner power to customers than PG&E.However, PG&E can supply electricity to Sonoma County mainly from the Mt. Diablo Nuclear Power Plant and hydroelectric power plants both of which deliver very cheap and totally clean power already. A Fukushima nuclear plant failure is nearly impossible at Mt. Diablo due to its design.

Sonoma Clean Power vs. 1.6 cent/kWh Clean Nuclear Power

Nuclear power from the Mt. Diablo plant is produced at a wholesale price of 1.6 cents per kilowatt-hour, an unbeatably low price. By comparison, three cities in Southern California just bought solar power from Silverado Solar for 7.1 cents per kilowatt-hour, excluding the expensive transmission costs associated with green power.

The San Francisco North Bay Business Journal estimated that Sonoma Clean Power could possibly produce electricity at about the same rate as PG&E but it would include a higher percentage of clean power, which it arguably doesn’t need.

Sonoma Clean Power High Estimate: $0.094 per kWh (33% clean power by 2020)
Sonoma Clean Power Low Estimate: $0.092 per kWh (33% clean power by 2020)
PG&E Clean Power: $0.096 per kWh (20% clean power as of 2013)

Source: North Bay Business Journal, April 15, 2013

No Power Plants Will Be Built in Sonoma Basin Smog Trap

Pricey, clean power is often justified in California where the topography creates air basins that trap smog.  California has 9 air basins that trap smog, including the small and narrow Sonoma Basin around the City of Santa Rosa. But Sonoma County enjoys comparatively clean air quality with airborne particulate levels way below the national average (city-data.com). The City of Santa Rosa has one of the lowest levels of ozone in the U.S., according to a 2007 survey in Business Week. None of either Sonoma Clean Power’s proposed future power plants nor any of PG&E’s existing power plants are located inside the Sonoma Air Basin nor would they contribute to trapping smog.

Switching to a new municipal electric utility doesn’t seem to be meeting much resistance in liberal Sonoma County, 75 percent of which voted for Pres. Obama in 2008 and 71 percent in 2012.

According to Stanford University Graduate School of Business the Levelized Cost of Crystalline Rooftop Solar Power is 24 cents per kilowatt hour excluding tax incentives, reverse metering costs and any reclassification of transmission costs as distribution by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC). Reverse metering entails having to reengineer the electric grid to run two ways, both to and from its customers.

Clean Power is Socialized Power

To make clean power economically feasible its higher cost has to be socialized over a large number of electric ratepayers, taxpayers, or shifted to large commercial users, such as California’s Cap and Trade emissions program does. Clean power is socialized power.

But some Sonomans might reply: “what do we care if clean energy is socialized, as long as we can privatize the profits and socialize the costs onto other PG&E or Sonoma Clean Power customers, while creating local jobs?”

To prevent cost shifting the CPUC would tack a 2-cent per kilowatt-hour surcharge on all electricity ratepayers Sonoma County. Additionally, a $10 per month surcharge on rooftop solar homeowners has recently been enacted under State Assembly Bil AB 327 to deal with the cost-shifting problem.

Certainly, the City of Santa Rosa won’t oppose higher-priced clean power because it tacks a 5% Utility Users Tax on electricity bills to feed its precarious general fund.

A county-run municipal electricity utility cannot make profits or enjoy clean power tax credits or tax write-offs. Power plants built by PG&E can be financed by both taxable debt and equity (stocks) while SCP can avail itself only of tax-exempt bonds. Tax exempt bonds are a potential advantage to SCP. But low-interest bonds also mean that SCP ratepayers would have to bear 100% of any default on those bonds compared to PG&E that can shift some risk to stockholders.

Sonoma Clean Power Plays ”How to Beat the Market”

Sonoma Clean Power is a gamble that it can buy cheap power or build power plants that generate cheap, clean power. If SCP builds power plants it incurs the risk that the power cannot be sold at the cost to produce it. Alternatively, if Sonoma buys power in the spot market that would expose it to the risk of market price volatility. This risk could be hedged or insured but at an extra cost.

Bill Roberts, economist for the Bay Area Economic Forum, in his 2007 study on the municipalization of local power purchases and generation, warned:

“If PG&E operates any retained generation and Sonoma Clean Power purchases 100% of its power supply in the competitive market, Sonoma cannot avoid higher average electricity rates than PG&E unless it subsidizes rates (or someone wins the gamble of ‘beating the market’).” [page 13, paraphrased for clarity].

To beat the market SCP must build its own power plants. SCP wants to build a new geothermal power plant nearby in The Geysers, the world’s largest geothermal energy field.

But tapping new geothermal power is a very risky venture, as Gov. Jerry Brown found out with his planned Bottle Rock Geothermal Power Plant after he left the Governor’s office in the 1970’s. The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California ended up having to pay off $282 million in bonds to bail Brown out of a political fiasco. In a long, complicated story, the City of Santa Rosa in Sonoma County ended up with cheap geothermal power partly paid for by water ratepayers in Southern California. But the next time Sonoma County residents will not be so lucky and will have to pay for any power plant fiascos.

Sonoma Clean Power will soon have to bring a concrete proposal for a clean power plant before the county for review. Any clean power plant proposal would be entirely superfluous in “blue sky” Sonoma County. By all indications the wine country of Sonoma County is going to end up drunk on unneeded green power. If it doesn’t make economic sense upon independent review, it remains to be seen how many Sonoma County residents may want to reconsider their gamble on municipal clean power, including exercising their “choice” to opt out of the program and return to PG&E as a customer.

Source: http://www.masterresource.org/2014/04/cal-wine-country-bad-power/

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Thursday, May 1, 2014

Electrical Safety Tips For Your Home – Electrical Contractor Fort Lauderdale

There are many different ways to prevent potential fires in your home due to electrical hazards. Bob Frank, owner of Perfect Electric and Air located in Fort Lauderdale, is giving, in these video,electrical safety tips on how to properly use extension cords and when to use them. Extension cords should be for temporary use and it [...]

Source: http://www.perfectelectricrepairs.com/2013/electrical-safety-tips-for-your-home-electrical-contractor-fort-lauderdale.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=electrical-safety-tips-for-your-home-electrical-contractor-fort-lauderdale

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Rebates for LEDs –

Screen Shot 2014-04-29 at 12.21.42 PM

Info from BriteSwitch — there’s a lot more here.

Source: http://electricalcontractor.com/?p=13737

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Infrared Thermo - The Language of Heat

Infrared Thermal imaging tells an electrical story

Picture 6 Infrared Thermo   The Language of Heat In EC&M Magazine October 2013 issue they discuss utilizing infrared thermography for your predictive and preventive maintenance program. Some points to take away:
•Used competently and intelligently, infrared imaging  used to pinpoint abnormally high or rising heat from resistance in electrical circuitry… can save money.
•Like Any Tool, Infrared Thermography is only as good as the Operator.
•The Technology Requires Both Operator Expertise and a Game Plan for Using It.
•In trained hands – and when integrated into a broader predictive and preventive electrical maintenance program – it can be used to get out in front of costly electrical breakdowns.
•Elements of a strong IR Thermography report generally include a detailed description of equipment, good images, description of the problems, testing conditions, a severity ranking, and recommended actions.
•Common mistakes inadequately trained imagers make, may include taking readings through cabinet doors and covers, not controlling for target emissivity and reflectivity that can produce false readings; and failing to understand how target distance and angle impact readings.
•You need equipment to run under normal operating conditions for thermal imaging to be meaningful.
•A long term imaging plan can be based on factors including reliability demands, component-specific findings, budget considerations, manufacturer recommendations, and even insurer thermography requirements.


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Copyright © Cooper Electric [Infrared Thermo - The Language of Heat], All Right Reserved. 2014.

Source: http://cooper-electric.net/infrared-thermo-the-language-of-heat/

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About

Enlighten Electric is a C2 licensed electrical contracting company (#75693) based in Las Vegas, NV.  We believe in keeping close contact with our Clients and General Contractors to make sure that work is complete and on time.  Being a small company we keep a low overhead and do our best to keep costs down and [...]

Source: http://www.enlighten-electric.com/2011/09/about/

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How do I know if I have FPE panel or Zinsco panel? Electrician Fort Lauderdale

Bob Frank, owner of Perfect Electric and Air Services located in Fort Lauderdale area, explains in this video how to identify FPE panel and Zinsco electrical panel. There are many potential hazards with these types of panels, including potential fires, and because of it homeowner’s insurance companies are not longer willing to insure homes with FPE and [...]

Source: http://www.perfectelectricrepairs.com/2013/how-do-i-know-if-i-have-fpe-panel-or-zinsco-panel-electrician-fort-lauderdale.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-do-i-know-if-i-have-fpe-panel-or-zinsco-panel-electrician-fort-lauderdale

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For Whom The Bell Tolls...Or Not?

Door bells are a convenient tool for announcing someone as arrived at your door. Depending on the chime, there are often different sounds for different doors to differentiate from one door to the other. When someone gets to your door they either knock or push a button to ring your door bell. When the button is pushed, it completes the door bell circuit and rings the bell. But what if the bell doesn't ring? What could possibly be wrong? Could it be operator error? Well maybe, but I would say it is a problem in the switch, wiring or the door bell itself. To find out for sure, you'll need to perform these door bell troubleshooting tips.

...

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Source: http://electrical.about.com/b/2014/04/14/for-whom-the-bell-tolls-or-not.htm

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What YOU Can Do to Reduce Pollution?

What YOU Can Do to Reduce Pollution?

 

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has prepared this fact sheet to answer some of the most common questions about reducing emissions from private vehicles.

 

This is an important concern, as cars are a major source of air pollution in the United States. Vehicle emissions contribute to health and environmental problems such as urban smog, air toxics, and global warming. Yet individual driving habits make a big difference in the amount of pollution a car produces.

 

Three easy things you can do to help keep emissions as low as possible are:

 

• Avoid unnecessary driving

• Maintain your car properly

• Drive your car wisely

 

By combining these strategies, you can very effectively reduce the amount your car pollutes. And there are additional benefits — your car will last longer and you will save money.

 

Avoid Unnecessary Driving

The most effective way to reduce emissions from your vehicle is to use it less.

Vehicle travel in this country is doubling every 20 years. Traffic trends that see

more and more cars driving more and more miles will soon begin to outpace

technological progress in vehicle emission control.

 

Several options are available to help you reduce the amount you drive. These

include consolidating trips, telecommuting, carpooling, using public transit, and choosing clean transportation alternatives such as biking or walking.

By planning errands, you will get the most out of time you do spend behind the wheel. For example, call ahead to confirm that the product you need is in stock before you drive to the store. Plan to do several tasks when you go somewhere.

 

Drive to a central location and park. Then walk between nearby destinations.

Ridesharing can be an ideal way to reduce your personal contribution to pollution.

 

Every time you share a ride and eliminate a trip, you help the environment. Try pairing up for trips to work or to social events — even an occasional carpool or ride on public transportation will make a difference.

 

Biking or walking to your destination creates no pollution at all. And you’ll

increase your fitness level at the same time.

-
About the Author:
<p>RunGreenPower.com will teach you how to build solar &amp; wind power systems foryour home within a weekend.</p><p>Check It Now: <a rel=”nofollow” onclick=”javascript:_gaq.push(['_trackPageview', '/outgoing/article_exit_link']);” target=”_blank” href=”http://www.rungreenpower.com/2010/09/21/buy-diy-solar-power-kit/”>Why to Buy DIY solar power Kit?</a></p>
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Source: http://reschelectrical.com/what-you-can-do-to-reduce-pollution/

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What to Look for When Hiring an Electrician–Pasadena Residents Need to Know

When you need an electrician it can be difficult to scan through the listings online and pick just the right one. You just never know what you are getting. It’s not like there is an app for that. You need to have an idea of the qualifications you should look for before you hire somebody […]

The post What to Look for When Hiring an Electrician–Pasadena Residents Need to Know appeared first on The Electric Connection.

Source: http://www.theelectricconnection.com/look-hiring-electrician-pasadena-residents-need-know/

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