5 Urgent Signs You Need Emergency Electrical Services ASAP

Brandon Caspersz • January 27, 2026

It’s a common habit to ignore electrical issues as long as your appliances are still turning on. We’ve all been there, noticing a small problem but putting off the repair because life is busy. However, waiting for a total breakdown before calling for help is a risky way to manage a home. Today’s electrical systems are complex, and by the time a major failure happens, the damage is often already done.


In this guide, we’ll show you exactly how our team steps in to secure your home when things go wrong. If your property is already showing these red flags, we will walk you through the immediate steps you need to take to prevent a disaster.


Sign 1: The "Fishy" Smell (A Chemical Red Flag)

If you notice a strange, pungent smell, similar to rotting fish or a strong chemical odour coming from a specific area of your home, don't ignore it. It’s highly unlikely to be a plumbing issue.


Why it happens: Most modern wall sockets and light switches are made from a heavy-duty plastic resin (like Bakelite or urea-formaldehyde). These materials are designed to handle heat, but if a wire is loose or a circuit is overloaded, the plastic begins to "cook" from the inside out. As it breaks down, it releases a chemical gas that smells exactly like fish.


By the time you can smell it, the plastic is already melting. This is what electricians call a "pre-ignition event." It's the stage right before an actual fire breaks out.


Sign 2: Is Your Switchboard Making Noise or Getting Hot?

If you ever catch a weird sizzling or buzzing sound coming from your fuse box, don't ignore it. That noise is usually arcing. It happens when electricity tries to "jump" across a gap because a wire is loose or snapped. Think of it like having tiny, constant lightning strikes happening right inside the panel. It gets incredibly hot, fast enough to melt through plastic and metal, and it’s a huge fire hazard.


The Overheating Problem

A lot of older houses are still running on those old-school ceramic fuses. They were fine back in the day when we just had a fridge and a couple of lights, but they just can't keep up with how we live now. They weren't built for:


  • Modern air con units
  • High-powered kitchen gear
  • EV chargers


When you try to pull too much power through an old board, the parts inside (like the busbars and wiring) start to cook.

Look out for this: If the board feels warm or hot when you touch it, the insulation on your wires is probably already starting to melt. We call this a "hot board," and it is one of the top reasons house fires start.


Sign 3: Flickering Lights & Voltage Swings (The Invisible Threat)


In a standard electrical setup, there is a specific path (the neutral wire) that carries electricity back to the source. If this connection becomes loose or breaks, something electricians call a "floating neutral," the electricity has nowhere to go. This causes the voltage in your home to go haywire.


Instead of a steady flow, your power starts to bounce around. One moment, a circuit might drop so low that your lights barely glow; the next, it can spike to double the normal voltage.


The Risk: This isn't just about lights. These massive power spikes are "equipment killers." They can instantly fry the motherboards in your smart TV, fridge, and computer. Even worse, it can cause your surge-protector power boards to overheat and catch fire because they simply aren't designed to handle that much "over-voltage."


Sign 4: Sparking and Scorch Marks (The Visible Warning)

If you see a brown or black scorch mark on an outlet, don't assume it was just a one-time thing. Usually, that mark is just the visible symptom of a much larger mess hidden inside your walls. If the outside is burnt, the wiring inside the wall cavity is likely charred and brittle.

There are two main reasons this happens behind the scenes:


  1. Vermin: In many local suburbs, rodents or possums find their way into roof spaces and wall cavities. They love to chew through cable insulation, leaving live wires exposed directly against your timber house frame.
  2. Coastal Corrosion: If you live near the coast, salt air can be a silent killer. It causes "carbon tracking," where a layer of salty soot builds up and creates a path for electricity to jump across. This can lead to a fire that smoulders undetected behind your drywall for hours before you even see a flame.


What to do:

  • Stop using the outlet: Immediately unplug everything from that power point.
  • Do not "test" it: Don't try to plug something else in to see if it still works. Every time it sparks, the heat increases, bringing you closer to a structural fire.
  • Get a Thermal Check: An emergency electrician from DM Electric can use thermal imaging to see if there is heat building up inside the wall where you can’t see it


Sign 5: Your Safety Switch (RCD) Won't Stop Tripping



If your RCD keeps clicking off, don’t treat it like a "nuisance" or just a "glitch." That switch is doing its job. When it cuts the power, it's because it found a leak (what we call an earth fault). Usually, it’s just something simple like rain getting into an outdoor light or a dishwasher element on its way out.


Don't Force It

The biggest mistake people make is trying to force the switch to stay "On" or constantly flicking it back up without fixing the problem. If you keep doing that, you can actually weld the internal parts together. Once that happens, the switch is broken and won't trip when you actually need it to, and that is how people end up getting a serious electric shock.


What to do if you spot a problem

If you see any of these signs, don't wait for things to fix themselves. You need to act fast to keep your home safe.

First, stop using the gear. If an appliance is acting up or a light won't stop flickering, turn it off and leave it alone. Don't try to "test" it again.


Check for smoke. Take a look to see if anything is smoldering or smells like burning plastic. Stay back, though, never touch any wires or metal parts that look like they're part of the problem.


Shut down the power. Head over to your fuse box. Look for the big switch labeled "Main Switch." Flip it to the OFF position. This kills the power to the whole house so the fault can't start a fire.


Stay back: If the fuse box itself is the thing sparking or making a loud noise, don't go near it. Just get everyone out and call for help.


Get a professional out. Once the power is off, contact the team at DM Electric. We’ll come over and run some tests to find the root of the problem. We’ll make sure everything is 100% right before the power goes back on.


Conclusion

A flickering light or a strange smell might be merely a small nuisance. But those minor issues are frequently the only alerts you get before a significant breakage occurs. Making your home secure is not only about ensuring that the power supply continues, but also means paying attention to and replacing the old wiring and parts that are out of sight in your walls and getting worn out over time.

Relying on these things is a huge gamble. If you notice something peculiar with the smell or the light, you should call the expert to inspect it right away before it turns into a fire or destroys your house. DM Electric is the one who can be there quickly to detect and rectify the issue before it gets worse. We will thoroughly check and give you the peace of mind that you no longer have to worry about it.

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