Keithville Generators

Generator Installation in Keithville, LA

Ed's Electric installs whole-house standby generators across Keithville — Generac, Kohler, Briggs & Stratton — sized for well pumps, septic aerators, and long rural service drops. Propane and natural gas both supported, Caddo Parish permits pulled.

  • Generac & Kohler installs
  • Well-pump inrush sizing
  • Propane tank coordination
  • Automatic transfer switches
  • Concrete or composite pad
  • Caddo Parish permits
  • Annual maintenance plans
  • Portable inlet boxes

Standby generators for rural Keithville

Rural Keithville properties are the last on the line to come back when SWEPCO restores after a storm — often 3–5 days into the outage. A properly sized standby generator eliminates the wait: your well pump, septic aerator, HVAC, fridge, and lights all keep running automatically.

We size based on your actual loads (including that big well-pump startup surge), coordinate propane tank sizing with your fuel supplier, install the transfer switch and pad, pull the Caddo Parish permit, and finish with start-up, load-bank testing, and a maintenance-schedule walk-through.

Ready to get started?

Call or text Ed's Electric — Shreveport's trusted licensed, bonded and insured electrician for 40+ years.

Keithville Generator FAQ

I'm on a well in Keithville — will a standby generator handle the pump?

Yes — well pump sizing is one of the first things we account for. Deep-well pumps have a high inrush current at startup; we size the generator to handle it without brown-outs on the rest of the panel.

Do I need natural gas for a standby generator?

No. Most Keithville installs run on propane because natural gas isn't available in much of the area. We help you size the tank correctly for your generator's run-time expectations, then coordinate delivery with your propane supplier.

How often do standby generators need service?

Once a year at minimum — oil, filter, and battery. We offer annual maintenance plans that also cover load-bank testing and cleaning, so your generator actually starts when the storm hits.