
Whole-Home Generator
Back up the entire panel — central air, pumps, the whole house — through a Thibodaux hurricane outage.
Read moreThibodaux — the Lafourche Parish seat just up the bayou, on the same hurricane track as Houma. A college town where standby backup is a real conversation after every multi-day outage.
Thibodaux housing runs from older single-family homes to newer subdivision builds, plenty of them on central air and pumps. Whole-home and essential-circuit standby installs both show up here; the deciding factor is the load calc and what the household cannot lose in an outage.
Calls climb sharply right after a hurricane leaves the area without power for days, then again in the spring as people decide to get installed before the next season instead of during the cone.

Back up the entire panel — central air, pumps, the whole house — through a Thibodaux hurricane outage.
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Back up only the fridge, a well or sump pump, an AC zone, and a few outlets — for less.
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The automatic switch that stops back-feed and puts the house on generator power, permitted and inspected.
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Oil, battery, and exercise-cycle service so the unit actually starts the night the grid drops.
Read moreTell us the Thibodaux house — square footage, AC size, pumps, and what you cannot lose in an outage. We talk through whole-home vs essential-circuit on the phone — no charge.
We come out, run the load calculation, check the panel and the gas-line capacity, and confirm the unit, fuel, and a firm number in writing before anything starts.
Pull the local electrical permit, set the generator, run the fuel, wire the automatic transfer switch, and connect to the panel — to code.
Pass inspection, run the unit, set the exercise cycle, and walk you through exactly how it carries the house. You sign off only when it's right.
Free phone quote and a real load calculation. A few minutes tells you whole-home or essential-circuit — and we're honest about when a portable is enough.