04/30/2026
We were on-site recently performing an infrared scan, and from the outside… everything looked normal.
No outages.
No complaints.
No visible issues.
But the IR camera told a different story.
Hot spots on connections that “looked fine.”
Uneven load distribution.
Early-stage failures that no one could see with the naked eye.
Nothing had failed yet—but it was only a matter of time.
This is exactly why infrared scanning is so important.
Most electrical issues don’t start as emergencies.
They build slowly… silently… behind closed panels.
By the time you can see or feel a problem, you’re already dealing with downtime, damage, or risk to your team.
IR scans give you the advantage of catching those problems early—
before they become outages, safety hazards, or expensive repairs.
With standards like NFPA 70B now requiring certain preventative maintenance, annual infrared inspections aren’t just a best practice—they’re the base standard.
If you haven’t had your system scanned recently, it’s worth asking:
What’s happening in your equipment that you can’t see?