Power Board Not Working Neutral Bay

Emergency Response in Neutral Bay

Licensed electrician dispatched fast · 24/7 · 30–60 min

24/7 Emergency Response Licensed & Insured 30–60 Min Arrival Upfront Pricing

Apartment-heavy pockets through North Sydney, Crows Nest, St Leonards, and Chatswood have a different North Shore profile — strata-managed common property, individual unit boards, EV-charger common-property infrastructure as a current capital priority, and the body-corporate scheduling considerations that come with high-rise residential.

On the North Shore the bigger leafy homes and Chatswood strata towers are stacking on EV chargers, data cabinets and home automation, which pushes original boards past their limit. A power board that's tripping or dead up here is often an overloaded board that needs proper RCBOs and a capacity upgrade.

⚠ Stop — Call Immediately if You Notice Any of These:
  • A burning, plastic, or fishy smell from the board
  • Visible scorching, browning, or melting on the board
  • The board is hot to touch
  • The cord is hot or has visible damage
  • A spark or pop occurred when something was plugged in
  • The board buzzes or crackles
  • Smoke from any direction near the board
  • The wall outlet feeding it is hot or smells
Full guide: Why Is My Power Board Not Working? — causes, FAQs & expert advice

About Why Is My Power Board Not Working?

A dead power board is most commonly caused by a blown internal fuse, an exhausted surge-protector module, a failed rocker switch, or a faulty wall outlet feeding it. If the outlet behind the board feels hot or smells burnt, that is a fire risk — book an urgent inspection or call 0433 462 902 now.

Sydney homes — particularly pre-1990s dwellings — were wired with far fewer outlets than modern living demands, which is why power boards are routinely run harder than they were designed for. Running multiple high-current appliances — heaters, kettles, hairdryers, toasters — through a single board for sustained periods overloads the strip and stresses the outlet behind it. Sydney Electrical Service operates 24/7 across every metropolitan suburb and can diagnose whether the fault lies in the board, the outlet, or the circuit.

What to Do Right Now in Neutral Bay

  1. Try a different appliance in the board to confirm the board is dead, not the appliance.
  2. Check the on/off switch if the board has one. Some boards have illuminated switches that fail.
  3. Look for an overload reset button — a small button on the side or end of the board.
  4. Try the wall outlet directly with a known-working appliance.
  5. If the wall outlet is also dead, see Why is my power point not working?.
  6. Check the board's surge protection indicator if fitted — typically green/red.
  7. Inspect the cord for cuts, abrasions, or kinks.
  8. Check for liquid contamination or visible internal damage.
  9. If the wall outlet is hot or scorched, isolate the breaker and call us.

Electrical work in Neutral Bay

Neutral Bay is dense, walkable and dominated by flats. Streets like the area around Military Road are lined with Art Deco and inter-war apartment blocks, plenty of red-brick walk-ups, and a good number of more recent strata developments mixed in among the surviving Federation terraces and semis. That makes a lot of the electrical work here strata work, shared switchboards, common-property circuits and metering, and individual unit upgrades inside older blocks where the original wiring and fuse boards never anticipated modern living.

In those vintage apartments we're regularly replacing ceramic-fuse boards with modern switchboards, adding the safety switches that are now required and tidying up wiring that's been patched over many tenancies. As a Level 2 ASP we also take care of the supply side that sits behind a building, the consumer mains and the connection to the Ausgrid network, which matters when a block is being upgraded or capacity needs lifting. It's close, established housing that rewards careful, code-compliant work.

Common Questions

No. Power boards are not designed to be opened or serviced. Once a board has failed, dispose of it (e.g. via your local Sydney council e-waste service) and replace with a new unit.
Add up the wattage of everything plugged in. A standard 10 A board is rated for 2,400 W maximum and most cheap boards should be operated well below that. A heater (2,000 W) and a kettle (2,400 W) on the same board exceeds the rating immediately.
Surge protectors have a finite energy capacity. Each surge they absorb degrades them slightly; eventually they reach end of life and the indicator light goes from green to red. After that, the board still distributes power but offers no protection.
Modern compliant boards rated for the load are generally fine for sustained use. Cheap or aged boards with high-current appliances are not. If your power board is hot during normal use, replace it.

Why Neutral Bay Residents Choose Us

Heritage Federation streets through Pymble, Wahroonga, and Roseville require electricians familiar with original 1900s–1920s wiring methods, retrofit RCD-only-bank protection, and council heritage-overlay considerations that affect external installations.

Also serving nearby

CremorneCammerayKirribilliNorth SydneyMosman

Electricians across the Inner North

Neutral Bay is part of the wider Inner North area our team covers. See our electricians across the Inner North →

24/7 Emergency Electrician — Neutral Bay

Licensed, local & dispatched fast. Serving Neutral Bay 2089 and all surrounding suburbs.

Call now — we answer 24 hours, 7 days