A Cleaner Way to Mount Your Television
Wall-mounted televisions have become the standard in many homes, but the wiring behind them is often an afterthought.
Browse our panel photo gallery to identify what you have and learn whether replacement should be part of the conversation.
It may be one of the hardest-working devices in your electrical system.
The question isn't whether the charger can be installed.
The question is whether your electrical system has enough capacity to support it safely.
When a GFCI trips, it may cut power to multiple outlets—not just the one that has the reset button.
That's where many homeowners get stuck.
It's probably trying to protect you.
The bad news is:
It's trying to protect you from something.
Sometimes it's a microwave.
Sometimes it's a utility issue.
And sometimes it's a melted service conductor quietly trying to start a conversation.
When homeowners call and say: "Half my house lost power."
our first response is usually: "That's actually useful information."
One of the most overlooked upgrades for an outdoor living space is convenient access to electricity. Homeowners spend thousands of dollars building beautiful decks, patios, and outdoor gathering areas, then find themselves running extension cords across the deck every time they want to plug something in.
Pool chemicals can create a harsh atmosphere that gradually attacks metal components. Electrical panels, breakers, terminals, and enclosures can all be affected. What starts as minor surface corrosion can eventually become a much larger problem.
A smoke detector with a dead battery still hangs on the ceiling.
A bald tire still holds air.
Wall-mounted televisions have become the standard in many homes, but the wiring behind them is often an afterthought.
Wall-mounted televisions have become the standard in many homes, but the wiring behind them is often an afterthought.