Breaker that won’t stay on, half the house dark, a circuit that’s dead for no reason you can see. I trace the actual fault instead of guessing and swapping parts, anywhere around Lake Keowee.
Most electrical problems have one real cause, and the fix is fast once you find it. The hard part is finding it. A loose neutral, a nicked wire behind drywall, a corroded connection in a junction box, a buried line that took a shovel. Guessing means replacing good parts and billing you for it.
I work the circuit methodically with the right test gear. Continuity, voltage drop, fault distance on a cable tester. I read what the wiring is actually telling me, find the break, and show you what I found before I fix it. No mystery, no parts cannon.
This is the exact tool and method I use to pin down a break in a run, a Klein Tools ET450 cable tester reading how far down the wire the fault is. No tearing into walls to go hunting.
If any of these are happening, something in the wiring needs to be traced, not ignored until it gets worse.
It resets, then trips again, sometimes with nothing plugged in. That’s a short or ground fault somewhere on the circuit, not a coincidence.
Half a room or a whole circuit goes dark while everything else works. The break is somewhere upstream, and it’s findable.
Flickering when the AC kicks on, or lights that pulse for no reason, usually points to a loose connection or an overloaded neutral.
A switch or outlet cover that’s warm, or any faint burning smell, means a connection is arcing. Shut it off and call. This one doesn’t wait.
An outlet or breaker that trips the second you reset it is reading a real ground fault. The fault is real even when you can’t see it.
Intermittent faults are the worst to chase on your own. The right meter finds them whether they’re acting up at the moment or not.
You tell me what it’s doing and when. I map the circuit and narrow the problem down to a section instead of the whole house.
Continuity, voltage drop, and a cable tester that reads how far down the wire the break is. The video above shows exactly this on a Klein ET450.
I find the break, show you what caused it, and fix it the right way. Proper splice, proper connection, to code.
I confirm the circuit reads right under load, document what I found, and leave the work area clean.
Plenty of people will swap a breaker and hope. Finding the real fault takes a licensed electrician, the right tools, and someone who knows how the homes around this lake are wired.
Have a question not listed here? Call or text (864) 436-8680 — I’m happy to talk through it.
Tell me what it’s doing and when, and I’ll tell you what it takes to trace it.
Mon–Fri · 8am–6pm · Same-day emergency service available