What Counts as an Electrical Emergency
Not every electrical problem is an emergency. But these are — and warrant immediate professional attention:
Burning smell from power points, switchboard, or ceiling — this is potentially an arcing fault or overheating insulation, and it can start a fire in wall cavities without any visible flame. Turn off the circuit at the switchboard if you can identify it, and call immediately.
Tripped RCD or circuit breaker that keeps tripping — a circuit that trips every time you reset it has a fault that needs finding. Don't keep resetting and hoping; the fault will get worse.
No power to essential circuits — heating in a cold snap, refrigeration, medical equipment. These are real-world emergencies where the electrical issue has immediate practical consequences.
Water contact with electrical systems — flood water or roof leaks reaching electrical wiring, switchboards, or fittings. Water and electricity is a lethal combination. Turn off power at the main switch and don't re-energise until a licensed electrician has checked the affected circuits.
Burned or melted power points, switches, or fittings — these have already had a fault event and must be treated as a fire risk until inspected.
Our Emergency Response in Parkes
When you call our emergency line, you speak to a person who can dispatch an electrician. We triage the call — is anyone in immediate danger? Is there a burning smell? Is power off to essential equipment? — and give you guidance on what to do immediately while we're on the way.
Parkes town has a high proportion of older homes built in the 1960s–1980s with original fuse boxes and wiring. The agricultural surrounds create significant demand for three-phase power, grain storage electrical systems, and irrigation pump wiring. Solar installations are growing rapidly as regional electricity costs increase. The NBN-era digital economy is also driving data cabling and network infrastructure demand.
For the genuinely dangerous situations — burning smells, water contact with electrics, active arcing — we'll advise you to turn off the main switch and stay clear until we arrive. We won't advise you to investigate electrical faults yourself. That's what we're for.
Our emergency vehicles carry a full range of fault-finding equipment, replacement fittings, switchboard components, and cable. Most emergency electrical faults can be isolated and made safe on the first visit, with permanent repairs completed at the same time or scheduled for the following day where extensive work is needed.
After the Emergency — Certificates and Insurance
Every emergency electrical job comes with a Certificate of Compliance for Electrical Work. For insurance claims involving electrical faults — fire damage, water damage to electrical systems — the insurer will need documentation of what caused the fault, what was done, and who did it.
We photograph fault conditions before rectification, document the scope of work clearly, and provide the certificates and reports insurers need. For significant electrical fault events — particularly those involving fire damage — we can also provide a technical statement describing the nature and likely cause of the fault.
For business clients in Parkes, we understand that an electrical fault can cost significant revenue per hour of downtime. We prioritise commercial call-outs and work to restore operation as quickly as safely possible.
Preventing Electrical Emergencies
Most electrical emergencies in Parkes homes are predictable. Old switchboards with original ceramic fuses or early-generation circuit breakers without RCDs are the highest risk. Old rubber-insulated wiring (TRS wiring common in pre-1970 homes) that's become brittle and cracking creates fault risk whenever it moves or gets disturbed.
The best investment in electrical safety for an older Parkes home is a switchboard upgrade that installs modern MCBs and RCDs across all circuits. RCDs detect earth faults within milliseconds and disconnect the circuit — they prevent the majority of electrocution incidents and most electrical fires.
We offer electrical safety inspections across Parkes — a systematic assessment of your switchboard, visible wiring, and circuits that identifies fault risks before they cause problems. For homeowners with older houses in Peak Hill, Alectown, and Tullamore, this is worthwhile peace of mind.
24/7 Emergency Coverage Across Parkes
Our emergency electrical service covers all of Parkes and surrounding areas including Peak Hill, Alectown, Tullamore, Trundle, Cookamidgera, Bogan Gate, Mandagery, Nelungaloo. For life-threatening situations — burning smells, active electrical arcing, water-affected electrical systems — we aim to be on-site within 1–2 hours.
After-hours call-out rates apply outside standard business hours. We'll tell you the rate before dispatching so there are no surprises. For genuine electrical emergencies, don't wait — the cost of a call-out is trivial compared to the cost of an electrical fire.
For electrical faults related to the external power supply — the lines from the street to your property — contact Ausgrid (Maitland area) or Essential Energy (Orange, Bathurst, Dubbo, Parkes) before calling us. Network faults are their responsibility.
Frequently Asked Questions
How fast can an emergency electrician get to Parkes? +
For genuine electrical emergencies — burning smells, arcing, water contact — we aim to be on-site within 1–2 hours. After major storm events affecting multiple properties, response times may be longer but we prioritise the most dangerous situations first.
What should I do if I smell burning from a power point? +
Don't use the power point. If you can safely identify and isolate the circuit at the switchboard, do so. Don't investigate the power point yourself. Call us. A burning smell from a power point indicates a fault that could cause a fire — it needs a licensed electrician to assess and repair.
My RCD keeps tripping — what's wrong? +
An RCD that keeps tripping has detected an earth fault on that circuit. Common causes: a faulty appliance (unplug everything on the circuit and test each one), damaged wiring with exposed conductors, or moisture in a fitting. Don't just reset and hope — the fault will recur or worsen. We can locate and rectify the cause.
Is it safe to stay in the house with an electrical fault? +
It depends on the fault. If there's a burning smell, leave. If an RCD keeps tripping, it's safe to stay but don't use the affected circuits. If there's water contact with electrics, turn off the main switch and treat the area as unsafe. When in doubt, leave and call us from outside.
Do you charge after-hours rates for emergency electrical? +
Yes, after-hours call-out rates apply. We tell you the rate when you call before dispatching. For genuine emergencies, the additional cost is modest compared to the safety and property protection value of getting the problem resolved immediately.