Grounding and bonding audits and arc flash coordination studies give facility owners in Las Vegas, NV a clearer picture of how their electrical systems behave during faults. Many buildings have had equipment added over the years without a full review of grounding paths, bonding jumpers, or protective device settings. When Waze Electric performs grounding and bonding audits and arc flash coordination studies, we start by walking the gear line up and looking at how everything is tied together.


Grounding and bonding audits and arc flash coordination studies begin with solid grounding and bonding because fault current needs a clear path back to its source. In many older or heavily modified facilities around Las Vegas, NV, Henderson, NV, and Summerlin, NV, we see missing bonding jumpers, loose terminations, and connections that were never tightened to proper values. During grounding and bonding audits and arc flash coordination studies, Waze Electric looks at service grounding electrodes, equipment grounds, cable tray bonding, and link points between separate gear sections.
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Grounding and bonding audits and arc flash coordination studies highlight loose connections, missing bonds, and weak coordination so you can focus on the most important corrections.
Each set of grounding and bonding audits and arc flash coordination studies comes with practical recommendations that support long term reliability and compliance planning.
Adjusting protective devices based on coordination studies can reduce unnecessary trips and keep faults from taking down large portions of the system.

The main goal of grounding and bonding audits and arc flash coordination studies is to improve safety and reliability by making sure faults have solid paths, equipment is properly bonded, and protective devices operate in a coordinated way.
Many facilities review grounding and bonding audits and arc flash coordination studies every few years or after major changes to distribution, new equipment, or expansions.
Yes, even smaller sites with a few main panels can benefit from grounding and bonding audits and arc flash coordination studies, especially if they have sensitive loads or frequent breaker trips.
It helps to have single line diagrams, gear nameplate data, prior study reports if available, and access to panels and switchgear so we can verify details in the field.
When requested, we can provide labels based on study results and update documentation so maintenance staff have clear information at each piece of gear.
Some tasks require brief shutdowns for safety and data gathering, yet we work with your team to schedule this work during planned downtime or low impact periods.