vippowerllc.com

Power stays on when your street goes dark.
24/7 emergency support for South Florida homes & businesses. Call or text: (561) 662-5365 Request priority service
Generator not starting • Alarms on panel
Repairs & emergency support

When your generator fails, we find the real problem—and fix it right.

If your generator is shutting down, refusing to start, or throwing warning codes, you don’t just need a reset—you need a proper diagnosis. We repair standby generators for homes and businesses across South Florida, with a focus on long-term reliability, not band-aid fixes.

For: Whole-home & commercial standby systems
When: No-start, alarms, rough running, or storm-season issues
Where: Port St. Lucie through Miami
Prefer the phone? Call (561) 662-5365 and you’ll reach a real person, not a call center.
During storm season If your generator fails during an outage or active storm watch, let us know in your request. We prioritize active outages whenever possible.
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What you might be seeing

If you’re noticing any of this, it’s time to call.

You don’t have to know the technical name for the issue. If something feels off—or your generator already failed during a recent outage—let us know what you’re experiencing and we’ll translate it into a proper diagnosis.

Won’t start when the power drops
Generator doesn’t turn on automatically, cranks endlessly, or stays completely dead when the utility power fails.
Alarm lights & warning codes
You see red or yellow lights on the panel, error messages, or “not in auto” status without knowing why.
Shuts down mid-run
The generator starts, runs briefly, then shuts off—with or without a load on the property.
Runs rough, loud, or smoky
Unusual noises, vibration, exhaust smoke, or fuel smells that weren’t there before.
Transfer switch doesn’t move power
Generator is running, but your lights and essential systems inside the property never come on.
Battery or starting issues
Dead batteries, weak cranking, or units that only start if you manually intervene at the panel.
What we repair

From batteries to transfer switches.

A standby generator is a full system, not just the engine. We inspect and repair the components that actually determine whether your property stays powered when it counts.

Core systems
Engine, alternator & controls
  • Hard-starting or no-start conditions
  • Engine misfires, stalling, or rough running
  • Voltage and frequency irregularities
  • Control board & sensor faults
Power transfer
Automatic Transfer Switch (ATS)
  • Utility-to-generator transfer issues
  • Generator runs but house stays dark
  • Stuck or delayed transfer
  • Contact wear & calibration issues
Readiness
Fuel, battery & starting systems
  • Battery testing & replacement
  • Fuel delivery problems (gas or diesel)
  • Leaking lines, clogged filters, regulators
  • Starting/charging system faults
Process

A repair visit, step by step.

We don’t treat repair calls like a quick reset. Every visit follows a structure so we leave you with answers, not just quiet alarms.

1
We listen to what you’re seeing.
You share what happened, when it started, and any recent outages, work, or changes. Photos of panels or codes are always welcome.
2
We run targeted tests on-site.
We inspect, test, and run the system under realistic conditions to identify the actual cause—not just the symptom.
3
We repair, verify & document.
Once we make the repair, we verify performance, explain what failed, and provide a clear recommendation for maintenance going forward.
Brands

We repair major standby generator brands.

If your system is a common residential or light-commercial standby unit, there’s a strong chance we can help. If you’re not sure, send us a photo of the nameplate and we’ll confirm.

Generac Kohler Cummins Caterpillar Briggs & Stratton And other major standby brands

Our repair standard.

We don’t consider a repair complete until your system has been tested under realistic conditions and you understand what we did and why.

That means no disappearing after a quick reset, no guessing with parts, and no leaving you with vague notes that don’t mean anything the next time there’s a storm.

You get clear communication, documented work, and an honest view of what your generator can handle going into the next outage.