When you plan for maintenance, you’re in control of the timing, the budget, and the outcome. When you wait for something to break, you give up all three.
Preventative Maintenance:
This approach is predictable and budget-friendly. You schedule service around your operating hours, avoid expensive rush fees, and fix small problems before they grow.
For example:
- A scheduled inspection and line test might take 2–4 hours and cost a few hundred dollars.
- Technicians tighten connections, check breakers, and document the system status, giving you peace of mind and a clear path forward.
Emergency Repairs:
These are high-stress, high-cost situations. You’re dealing with unplanned downtime, urgent repair rates, and possibly multiple system failures.
For example:
- If a panel overheats and fails unexpectedly, the replacement could run into the thousands. Add 48–72 hours of lost production, and the total financial hit skyrockets.
- In one case CTI Electric handled, a neglected system failure required a full electrical system replacement. The total cost? Several million dollars—plus business interruption losses.
The choice is simple: pay a little now for prevention or pay a lot later for recovery.