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Spa Circuit, Patio Power, Generator Relocation and a Hidden Attic Hazard Fixed

Spa Circuit, Patio Power, Generator Relocation and a Hidden Attic Hazard Fixed image
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This one had a lot of moving parts. The homeowner wanted a 60A spa circuit with a proper disconnect, a dedicated circuit for a patio shade structure, and their generator relocated to a better spot. That alone is a solid day's work. But jobs like this have a way of revealing more once you get into them.

We started with the trenching. Getting conduit in the ground under an existing concrete patio means cutting in cleanly, running the conduit at the right depth, and transitioning it up through the post base without it looking like an afterthought. The weatherproof box mounted to the patio post and the rigid conduit running down into the trench - that's code-compliant work done the right way, not the fast way. Everything is sealed, properly supported, and ready for the long haul.

The generator relocation meant running new conduit along the exterior wall up to the roofline. You need that run to be straight, secure, and weather-tight. The disconnect was mounted cleanly on the stucco, and the conduit was strapped tight all the way up. No shortcuts, no sloppy bends.

Then came the attic. We needed attic access to complete the routing, and once we were up there, we found wiring that had no business being left alone. Exposed splices sitting out in the open between rafters - no junction box, no protection. That's a fire hazard. We repaired it on the spot, properly housed and secured. It's the kind of thing you'd never know was up there until it became a real problem. Finding it and fixing it before that happened is exactly the kind of work that matters most, even if it never shows up in a before-and-after photo.

Between the trenching, conduit work, exterior runs, attic access, and the troubleshooting and repair we picked up along the way - this was a full electrical overhaul for this backyard and home. Every circuit is dedicated, properly sized, and code-compliant. That's how we do it every time.