Electrical Infrared Inspections in Florida

Certified Thermal Imaging for Electrical Panels, Breakers & Switchgear


What Are Electrical Infrared Inspections?

Electrical infrared inspections use advanced thermal imaging to detect overheating, arcing, and loose connections in electrical systems before they fail. These non-contact, non-invasive scans are critical in preventing electrical fires, reducing downtime, and ensuring compliance with NFPA 70B and OSHA standards.


Why Infrared Electrical Testing Matters

🔥 Identify Hidden Hazards before equipment fails

🏢 Required for insurance and risk management in many Florida HOAs and commercial buildings

💼 Essential for 40-Year Recertification Inspections in Miami-Dade, Broward & beyond

⏱️ Avoid costly unplanned shutdowns and protect critical systems

📋 Documented proof of preventative maintenance for liability protection


📷 What We Inspect

We conduct full-scope infrared inspections on:

Main switchgear

Circuit breakers & panels

Disconnects & busbars

Transformers

Motors & drives

Control panels (HVAC, elevators, etc.)

Generator & UPS systems


🏆 Who Needs Electrical Infrared Inspections in Florida?

Condominium associations & HOA boards
Property managers & facility maintenance teams
Commercial & industrial property owners
Insurance adjusters & safety consultants
Government buildings, schools & hospitals


📍 Serving All of Florida

Our state-certified infrared thermographers and electrical engineers cover the entire state:

South Florida: Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach

Central Florida: Orlando, Tampa, Sarasota

North Florida: Jacksonville, Gainesville, Tallahassee


📑 NFPA 70B Compliant Inspections

As required by NFPA 70B, routine infrared thermography helps prevent catastrophic failures in:

Critical load systems

Emergency backup power

High-amp service panels

Industrial motor control centers

You’ll receive a full report with thermal images, issue descriptions, temperature anomalies, and corrective action recommendations.

electrical infrared inspection done by EMA engineers in Florida electrical infrared inspection in Florida condos by EMA engineers


📊 What’s Included in Your Infrared Report

Color-coded thermal images of each hot spot

Location, load, and component ID

Temperature rise (ΔT) above baseline

Severity rating (Critical, Urgent, Monitor)

Recommended repairs and urgency

Certification for insurance or safety compliance

Related Services 


🛠️ Infrared Inspections Help You Avoid:

Electrical fires

Unexpected power loss

Business interruption

OSHA & insurance violations

Fines during safety audits


💬 Client Testimonials

“Their electrical infrared survey helped us identify two critical hotspots in our rooftop panels. We fixed them before failure. Professional, fast, and worth every dollar.”
Operations Manager, Orlando Hotel

“We needed a certified thermographer for our 40-year inspection in Broward. Their report was detailed and insurance-approved.”
Condo Board President, Hollywood, FL


📅 When Should You Schedule an Electrical Infrared Scan?

Annually for commercial & condo electrical systems

Before hurricane season in Florida

As part of a 40/50-year building inspection

After major renovations or panel upgrades

If your insurance carrier requires loss prevention reporting


📞 Schedule Your Electrical Infrared Inspection Today

Our certified thermographers deliver industry-compliant weekquest a Free Quote
📞 Call Now: (321) 355-6052

Infrared inspections.

Infrared inspections find hot spots caused by defects in connections and components. Infrared electrical inspection or thermography is used to find areas of excess heat (caused by increased resistance) so that problems can be corrected before a component fails, causing damage to the component, creating safety hazards, and productivity loss. Because increased heating is a sign of failure, infrared electrical inspection is the best diagnostic tool available for finding these hot connections in the early stages of degeneration. This is why your insurance company may have asked for an electrical infrared inspection, to find and prevent problems before they cause damage to your personnel, equipment, and facility, thus reducing downtime and repair costs to the owners, etc.

Electrical infrared inspections

 Infrared Inspections

should be an integral part of any electrical preventive maintenance (EPM) program. This type of electrical infrared inspection can help save money by verifying that equipment is operating at peak efficiency and reducing costly downtime in the event of electrical system failure. It can also help save the costs associated with the damage that a fire may cause if an electrical system overheats or fails catastrophically. This inexpensive inspection program has evolved into a valuable preventive maintenance tool. The following information discusses the benefits of infrared inspection and explains how the inspections are conducted. The heating effect continued to increase past the red, in a region that is now called infrared (“below red”). He measured radiation effects from fires, candles, and stoves and deduced the similarity of light and heat. Today, devices can be designed to detect, amplify, and display radiation from the visible or infrared portions of the spectrum. Using infrared for electrical infrared inspection and by using infrared technology as part of an electrical infrared inspection program works on the principle that electrical equipment normally gives off heat, but malfunctioning or overloaded electrical equipment will give off excessive heat due to increased electrical resistance. This heat can be detected with the use of infrared inspections. Using an infrared camera or video recorder, the heat can be converted to an image that can be seen and recorded for analysis. The infrared camera can display various temperatures that are being recorded and the temperature differential between “normal” and malfunctioning equipment. The images can be used to identify exactly what equipment is affected and how serious a problem exists based on temperatures and temperature differentials. The images can be inserted into a report to help explain the problem and any suggested repairs or improvements. Infrared should be scheduled before a major scheduled shutdown. This allows the greatest flexibility in resolving problems found during the inspection. Infrared inspections are a non-destructive test that should be completed during normal business operations while equipment is running at or near capacity. Equipment should run for at least one hour before inspection. There is no need for downtime or special tear-down of the equipment to perform the electrical infrared inspection. However, equipment covers must be removed to ensure effective scanning. Because busway conductors are so close to enclosures, the covers may not need to be removed during infrared inspections for electrical equipment.

Electrical Infrared inspections.

Electrical Infrared inspections find hot spots caused by defects in connections and components. Infrared electrical inspection or thermography is used to find areas of excess heat (caused by increased resistance) so that problems can be corrected before a component fails, causing damage to the component, creating safety hazards, and productivity loss. Because increased heating is a sign of failure, infrared electrical inspection is the best diagnostic tool available for finding these hot connections in the early stages of degeneration. This is why your insurance company may have asked for an electrical infrared inspection, to find and prevent problems before they cause damage to your personnel, equipment, and facility, thus reducing downtime and repair costs to the owners, etc.

Electrical infrared inspections

 Infrared Inspections

Should be an integral part of any electrical preventive maintenance (EPM) program. This type of electrical infrared inspection can help save money by verifying that equipment is operating at peak efficiency and reducing costly downtime in the event of electrical system failure. It can also help save the costs associated with the damage that a fire may cause if an electrical system overheats or fails catastrophically. This inexpensive inspection program has evolved into a valuable preventive maintenance tool. The following information discusses the benefits of infrared inspection and explains how the inspections are conducted. The heating effect continued to increase past the red, in a region that is now called infrared (“below red”). He measured radiation effects from fires, candles, and stoves and deduced the similarity of light and heat. Today, devices can be designed to detect, amplify, and display radiation from the visible or infrared portions of the spectrum. Using infrared for electrical infrared inspection and by using infrared technology as part of an electrical infrared inspection program works on the principle that electrical equipment normally gives off heat, but malfunctioning or overloaded electrical equipment will give off excessive heat due to increased electrical resistance. This heat can be detected with the use of infrared inspections. Using an infrared camera or video recorder, the heat can be converted to an image that can be seen and recorded for analysis. The infrared camera can display various temperatures that are being recorded and the temperature differential between “normal” and malfunctioning equipment. The images can be used to identify exactly what equipment is affected and how serious a problem exists based on temperatures and temperature differentials. The images can be inserted into a report to help explain the problem and any suggested repairs or improvements. Infrared should be scheduled before a major scheduled shutdown. This allows the greatest flexibility in resolving problems found during the inspection. Infrared inspections are a non-destructive test that should be completed during normal business operations while equipment is running at or near capacity. Equipment should run for at least one hour before inspection. There is no need for downtime or special tear-down of the equipment to perform the electrical infrared inspection. However, equipment covers must be removed to ensure effective scanning. Because busway conductors are so close to enclosures, the covers may not need to be removed during infrared inspections for electrical equipment.

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