I'm a one-person electrical shop serving Steinbach and the Southeast. From a flickering breaker to a full panel upgrade, I show up on time, work clean, and explain the why before I run the wire.
Residential and light-commercial electrical for Steinbach homes, farms and small shops. If it's behind a breaker, on a switch or hanging from the ceiling, I can take care of it.
Tripping breakers, dead outlets, flickering lights, that-one-circuit-no-one-can-figure-out. I trace it, fix it, and tell you what caused it.
Pot lights, fixtures, dimmers, under-cabinet, exterior, motion sensors. Clean cuts in the drywall and ceilings that look factory-finished.
100A to 200A service changes, sub-panels for garages and additions, breaker swaps, and proper labelling so the next person isn't guessing.
Level-2 chargers wired from the panel to the garage or driveway. Sized to your car, your panel and your future plans. Permitted and inspected.
Pre-purchase home checks, insurance-required reports, post-renovation reviews. A clear, honest write-up of what's safe and what needs attention.
Adding outlets where you actually need them, USB and GFCI upgrades, new circuits, renovation rough-ins for kitchens, basements and additions.
AFCI and GFCI swaps, smoke and CO interconnects, surge protection, and replacing the scary stuff hiding in older Steinbach homes.
Transfer switches and inlet boxes so when the power's out, you flip one switch and your house is on. No extension cords through the window.
Electrical is one of those trades where the bad work is hidden behind drywall for years. Here's how I make sure mine isn't.
I trace the existing wiring and your panel layout first. Nine times out of ten, half the "problem" is a label nobody updated since 1994.
Gauge sized to the actual draw, not the closest thing in the truck. Splices in boxes only — never buried in a wall or insulation.
Panel changes, EV chargers, sub-panels, additions — all pulled and inspected. It's how you find out for sure the job was done right.
Every breaker labelled with what it actually controls. Junction boxes documented. So next time someone opens that panel, they're not guessing.
Drop cloths down, shop vac before I leave, drywall holes patched or cleanly cut for someone else to patch. Your house, my respect.
Every job is different, so these are starting ranges — not gotchas. You get a written quote before I plug a tool in.
For the small stuff — a dead outlet, a tripping breaker, a fixture that won't cooperate.
Lighting, outlets, sub-panels, rough-ins — the day-to-day work that adds up to a finished home.
100A → 200A upgrades, full panel swaps, EV-ready service changes. Permitted and inspected end-to-end.
Call, text or fill the form. Tell me what's going on — photos help a lot.
I come by, look at the panel and the work, and write you a clear quote. No pressure.
Booked in, parts on the truck, drop cloths down. You'll know what I'm doing as I do it.
Everything tested under load, panel labelled, work explained, and the place tidied up.
You'll talk to the same person who quotes the job, runs the wire and labels the panel. No revolving door of subcontractors guessing at someone else's work.
Surprises on the invoice are the fastest way to wreck a trade relationship. If I find something extra mid-job, I stop, show you, and we agree on it before I keep going.
Tidy panels, proper boxes, permits where required. Whether it's your forever home or you'll sell it in three years, the electrical won't be what's holding up the inspection.
Based out of Steinbach, working within roughly a 40-minute drive of town. If you're a little further out, ask — I'll usually find a way.
If your address is anywhere near these, you're inside the no-travel-charge zone.
This site is brand new — I spent the last few years building a reputation the slow way, one job and one referral at a time. If you don't see a wall of reviews here yet, that's why. Here's what you get instead: a clear promise, in plain language.
Quick description and a photo or two is usually enough for a ballpark. Bigger jobs I'll come look at — no charge, no pressure.