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What does a data center electrical contractor typically provide?

Quick Answer

A data center electrical contractor delivers the full power backbone: design-build of redundant utility feeds, switchgear, UPS and generator systems; installation of PDUs, busways, grounding, and monitoring controls; plus load-bank testing, and commissioning.

Detailed Answer

Modern data centers can’t afford even seconds of downtime, so the electrical contractor you hire must act as a turnkey reliability partner. A typical scope begins with load analysis and one-line design that meets NEC, NFPA 70E and client Tier ratings. The contractor engineers dual utility feeders, medium-voltage switchgear, transformers, and A-and-B busways sized for future growth.

Inside the white space they install PDUs, RPPs and branch whips, verify grounding and bonding grids, and label every circuit for rapid troubleshooting. Critical back-up systems are next. Your contractor furnishes diesel or natural-gas generators, automatic transfer switches, battery or flywheel UPS modules, plus paralleling gear to guarantee n-plus-one redundancy.

They integrate the equipment with SCADA or Siemens and Allen Bradley PLC-based electrical control systems for real-time monitoring of voltage, harmonics and breaker status.

Before hand-off, the team performs factory witness tests, on-site acceptance, infrared thermography, and full integrated-systems commissioning—including load-bank runs that simulate worst-case demand.

PEC’s Electrical & Controls team brings the same disciplined approach it uses in industrial process equipment services: in-house electrical control systems integration, UL-compliant panel fabrication, millwright and rigging services for heavy switchgear, and turnkey industrial contracting that keeps mission-critical facilities running without surprises. Combine those strengths with PEC’s industrial automation and robotics solutions to streamline environmental monitoring, cable handling, and battery maintenance.