Industrial Power Quality Alamance, Durham, Chatham, Guilford, Orange County, NC

Clean Power Keeps Your Equipment Running

When motors trip offline, automation systems glitch, or your utility bill includes power factor penalties, your facility has a power quality problem. We diagnose and fix voltage sags, harmonic distortion, and electrical noise across Alamance, Durham, Orange, and Chatham County.

Why Industrial Facilities Choose ESP

01

Licensed Master Electrician

Over 35 years of NC-licensed electrical experience means proper diagnostics and code-compliant installations that protect your equipment and your investment.

02

Diagnostic Testing First

We use power quality analyzers to monitor your system over time and identify actual problems—voltage sags, harmonics, poor power factor—before recommending solutions.

03

Transparent Flat-Rate Pricing

Know the exact cost before work starts. No hourly billing uncertainty, no surprise charges after the job, just honest pricing for industrial electrical work.

04

Serving Central NC Since 2002

Two decades solving power quality problems for manufacturing, distribution, and commercial facilities means your electrical issue isn’t the first time we’ve seen it.

Power Quality Services for NC Manufacturers

Your Equipment Needs Stable, Clean Power

Industrial facilities run on three-phase power systems that feed VFDs, automation equipment, motors, and sensitive electronics. When power quality degrades—through voltage sags, harmonic distortion, poor power factor, or electrical noise—equipment malfunctions, production stops, and utility bills increase.

Power quality problems don’t fix themselves. Voltage sags from motor startups will keep shutting down your production line. Harmonics from VFDs will keep overheating transformers. Poor power factor will keep generating utility penalties every month. These issues require proper diagnostics to identify what’s actually happening in your electrical system, then targeted solutions that address the root cause.

ESP Electrical Service Providers has been diagnosing and correcting industrial power quality issues across Alamance, Durham, Chatham, Guilford, Orange County, NC since 2002. Our licensed electricians with over 35 years of experience use power quality analyzers to monitor your system, identify problems when they occur, and implement solutions that last.

Benefits of Industrial Power Quality Solutions

What Happens When Power Quality Improves

Clean, stable power protects equipment, reduces downtime, lowers utility costs, and keeps automated systems operating the way they're supposed to.

01

Your production equipment stays online instead of shutting down every time a large motor kicks on somewhere in the facility.

02

Transformers and motors run cooler because harmonic distortion isn’t generating excess heat in windings and conductors.

03

Monthly utility bills drop when power factor correction eliminates the penalties most commercial customers don’t realize they’re paying.

04

Automation systems and PLCs stop receiving false signals from electrical noise that causes erratic operation and safety concerns.

05

Equipment lasts longer when it’s not being stressed by voltage fluctuations, surges, and harmonic heating every single day.

06

You avoid expensive emergency repairs and production losses by fixing power quality problems before they damage critical equipment.

Voltage Sag Mitigation and Surge Protection

Motors Start Without Shutting Down Your Line

When large motors, compressors, or HVAC systems start up, they pull a surge of current. If your electrical system can’t handle that demand without voltage sagging, everything on that circuit feels it. Lights dim, computers glitch, and sensitive equipment shuts off. This isn’t just annoying—voltage sags stress equipment every time they occur, wearing down power supplies and controllers until something fails at the worst possible time.

The fix depends on what’s causing the sag. Sometimes it’s undersized circuits that can’t handle the load. Other times it’s how equipment is distributed across your panels. Testing your system under actual operating conditions shows where voltage is dropping and why, then solutions can be designed that address the real problem instead of guessing.

Surge protection works the same way—it needs to be coordinated throughout your facility. Service entrance protection handles major external surges, but distribution and branch panel protection is necessary to catch the higher-frequency surges and internally generated transients from VFDs and switching equipment. IEEE Standard 1100-2005 shows surge currents in industrial facilities commonly reach 3,000 to 20,000 amperes. Standard equipment isn’t designed to handle that without proper protection in place.

Power Quality Assessment Process in NC

How We Solve Power Quality Problems

On-Site System Monitoring

We connect power quality analyzers to your electrical system to record voltage, current, harmonics, and power factor over time, capturing problems when they actually occur.

Data Analysis and Diagnosis

Recorded data identifies what’s causing issues—voltage sags, harmonics, poor power factor, or electrical noise—and where they’re happening in your system.

Solution Implementation

Targeted fixes address the root cause, whether that’s power factor correction capacitors, harmonic filters, surge protection, or circuit modifications that eliminate the problem.

Harmonic Distortion Analysis and Filtering

Stop Harmonics From Cooking Your Transformers

Variable frequency drives, servers, LED lighting, and other electronic equipment don’t draw current in smooth sine waves. They pull it in choppy pulses that create harmonic distortion traveling back through your electrical system. That distortion generates heat in transformers, neutral conductors, and motors—heat that doesn’t just waste energy, it degrades insulation, shortens equipment life, and creates fire hazards.

Transformers fail years early because harmonic heating cooked the windings. Neutral conductors get overloaded to the point of melting. Breakers trip for no apparent reason because the panel is carrying more current than the nameplate suggests. Fixing harmonic problems starts with measuring what’s actually happening using power quality analyzers to capture harmonic content at different points in your facility.

Once the data shows where harmonics are being generated and how severe the distortion is, solutions can be implemented—line reactors, harmonic filters, or isolation transformers depending on the application. IEEE 519 defines harmonic limits for industrial installations, and staying within those limits protects equipment while keeping your facility code-compliant.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What causes poor power factor in industrial facilities and how much does it cost?
Poor power factor happens when inductive loads like motors, transformers, and ballasts consume reactive power that doesn’t perform useful work. This is measured as the ratio of real power (doing work) to apparent power (total power drawn). A power factor of 0.70 means only 70% of the electricity you’re paying for is actually productive. The other 30% circulates through your system maintaining magnetic fields in motors and transformers. Most utility companies penalize commercial and industrial customers when power factor drops below 0.90, adding charges to your monthly bill that many facility managers don’t realize they’re paying. Power factor correction uses capacitors to supply reactive power locally, reducing the total current your facility draws from the utility. This eliminates penalties, reduces losses in your distribution system, and frees up electrical capacity without upgrading transformers or service panels. Capacitor installations typically pay for themselves in eight to fourteen months through reduced utility costs.
Common signs include equipment shutting down unexpectedly, lights flickering when motors start, circuit breakers tripping without obvious overloads, transformers running hot, automation systems behaving erratically, or higher-than-expected utility bills with power factor penalties listed. If you’re experiencing any of these issues, your facility likely has voltage sags, harmonic distortion, poor power factor, or electrical noise affecting your systems. The only way to know for certain is proper diagnostics using power quality analyzers that monitor your electrical system over time. These devices record voltage fluctuations, harmonic content, power factor, and other parameters while your facility operates normally. The data shows exactly what’s happening when problems occur—whether voltage is sagging during motor startups, harmonics are present from VFDs, or power factor is costing you money every month. Guessing at power quality problems wastes money on solutions that don’t address the actual issue. Testing identifies the real problem so fixes actually work.
Harmonic distortion occurs when non-linear loads like variable frequency drives, switching power supplies, servers, and LED lighting draw current in pulses instead of smooth sine waves. These pulses create harmonic currents at frequencies that are multiples of the fundamental 60Hz frequency—180Hz, 300Hz, 420Hz, and higher. Those harmonic currents travel through your electrical system generating heat in transformers, neutral conductors, motors, and other equipment. The heat doesn’t just waste energy, it actively degrades insulation, shortens equipment lifespan, and creates fire hazards. Transformers can fail years early when harmonic heating cooks the windings. Neutral conductors can become overloaded beyond their rated capacity because harmonic currents add together instead of canceling out. Breakers trip unexpectedly because the panel is carrying more total current than apparent from the connected loads. Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) is measured as a percentage—20% THD means harmonic currents equal 20% of the fundamental current. IEEE 519 sets limits on acceptable harmonic distortion levels. Exceeding those limits damages equipment and violates electrical code. Harmonic filters, line reactors, or isolation transformers reduce distortion to acceptable levels.
Absolutely. Electrical noise from motors, VFDs, and switching equipment induces voltages on nearby wiring that control systems interpret as legitimate signals. A PLC looking for small voltage changes from a sensor can’t distinguish between an actual signal and noise-induced voltage from a nearby motor. The result is false readings, erratic operation, and automation systems that don’t respond correctly. This creates production problems and safety concerns when equipment operates based on incorrect information. Electrical noise also affects communication between PLCs, drives, sensors, and other networked devices. Data corruption and communication failures happen when noise interferes with signal transmission. Reducing electrical noise requires proper grounding, shielded cables, physical separation between power and signal wiring, and filters that block high-frequency interference. In industrial environments with motors, VFDs, and heavy electrical loads, noise control isn’t optional—it’s necessary for automation systems to function reliably. Proper wiring practices, grounding, and filtering eliminate most noise issues before they cause operational problems.
When AC motors start, they draw inrush current six to ten times their normal full-load rating for several seconds. A 100-horsepower motor with 124 amps full-load current can pull 744 to 1,240 amps during startup. That massive current draw causes voltage to sag across the circuit feeding the motor and often affects other circuits connected to the same distribution panel or transformer. The voltage drop follows Ohm’s law—high current flowing through system impedance creates a voltage drop. Even small impedances produce significant voltage sags when startup currents reach hundreds or thousands of amps. Equipment on affected circuits experiences the voltage sag as dimming lights, computer glitches, or complete shutdowns when voltage drops below operating thresholds. Sensitive electronic equipment is particularly vulnerable because power supplies are designed to handle some voltage fluctuation but repeated sags wear them down until failure occurs. Solutions depend on the cause. Sometimes circuits are undersized for the connected load. Other times equipment distribution across panels needs adjustment. Soft starters or VFDs can reduce motor inrush current. Testing under actual operating conditions identifies where voltage is dropping and why so the right solution gets implemented.
Yes. We’ve been serving commercial and industrial facilities across Alamance County, Durham County, Orange County, and Chatham County since 2002. We’re based in Burlington but regularly work on manufacturing plants, distribution centers, warehouses, and other industrial operations throughout central North Carolina. Our licensed electricians with over 35 years of experience handle commercial electrical systems including three-phase power, larger service capacities, complex distribution panels, and the power quality issues that affect industrial equipment. Whether you’re operating a facility in Durham, Chapel Hill, Burlington, Hillsborough, Pittsboro, Mebane, Carrboro, or surrounding areas, we provide power quality diagnostics, power factor correction, harmonic filtering, surge protection, and other industrial electrical services. We use flat-rate pricing so costs are known before work begins, and our trucks are fully stocked to complete most jobs without delays waiting for materials.