Thermal Imaging for Electrical Systems & Data Rooms
Detecting electrical faults and fire risks before catastrophic failure through professional infrared thermography.
Why Thermal Imaging Matters
Electrical failures rarely happen without warning. Loose connections, degraded insulation, and overloaded circuits generate excess heat long before visible damage, smoke, or fire occurs. The problem is these warning signs are invisible to the naked eye and often missed during standard visual inspections.
Thermal imaging cameras detect infrared radiation, revealing temperature differences that indicate developing electrical faults. This allows problems to be identified and corrected during planned maintenance windows rather than emergency callouts following equipment failure, fire, or injury.
BS 7671 (18th Edition Wiring Regulations) increasingly references thermal surveys as part of comprehensive electrical safety programs. Insurance providers actively encourage thermal imaging to reduce fire risk and demonstrate proactive asset management.
Faults We Identify Through Thermal Imaging
Loose Connections
High-resistance joints in busbars, MCBs, contactors, and terminations. The most common electrical fault, creating localised heating that degrades connections further until catastrophic failure.
Circuit Overloading
Cables and protective devices operating beyond design capacity. Often caused by gradual load growth, improper circuit utilisation, or harmonics increasing effective current.
Phase Imbalance
Unequal load distribution across three-phase systems causing overheating in specific phases and the neutral conductor. Common in poorly designed or modified installations.
Component Degradation
Capacitor failures, contactor wear, transformer winding faults, and motor bearing issues all manifest as thermal anomalies before complete breakdown occurs.
Our Thermal Imaging Survey Process
Pre-Survey Planning
We review electrical drawings, identify critical circuits, and schedule surveys during peak load conditions (40-60% capacity minimum) when faults are most visible thermally.
- •Risk assessment and method statement (RAMS) for live electrical work
- •Coordination with site operations to access switchrooms and distribution boards
- •Equipment calibration and emissivity setting verification
On-Site Survey
Qualified thermographers using calibrated cameras systematically scan all electrical infrastructure while equipment remains energised and operational.
- •Main switchboards, distribution panels, and sub-distribution boards
- •Busbar chambers, cable terminations, and connection points
- •Motor control centres, contactors, and high-load circuits
- •UPS systems, generators, and backup power infrastructure
- •External connections, service entries, and metering equipment
Analysis & Reporting
Raw thermal images are processed, analysed against baseline temperatures, and prioritised by severity and risk. You receive a comprehensive report with annotated images, fault locations, and remediation recommendations.
- •Thermal images with temperature scales and reference baselines
- •Fault severity grading: Critical (immediate action), High (urgent), Medium (planned), Low (monitor)
- •Detailed fault descriptions, probable causes, and fire risk assessment
- •Remediation recommendations with estimated costs and timeframes
- •Year-on-year comparison highlighting trends and deterioration
BS 7671 & Regulatory Context
While thermal imaging isn't explicitly mandated by BS 7671, it aligns with several key requirements:
- Regulation 134.1.1: Good workmanship and proper materials. Thermal surveys validate installation quality and identify poor terminations.
- Regulation 421.1.1: Protection against fire caused by electrical equipment. Detecting overheating components directly addresses this requirement.
- Periodic Inspection (Section 6): Thermal imaging provides evidence of ongoing electrical safety between formal inspection periods.
IEC 60364 and IET Guidance Note 3 recognise thermal imaging as a valuable diagnostic tool for electrical installations. Many insurance providers now require annual thermal surveys as a condition of cover for high-value or critical installations.
Critical Infrastructure & Data Centre Applications
Data centres represent the most demanding application for thermal imaging. Electrical failures in data halls cause cascading shutdowns affecting thousands of servers and customers. Uptime Institute Tier certifications require proactive monitoring and fault detection.
Our data centre thermal surveys extend beyond electrical distribution to include:
- •UPS battery string thermal profiling identifying cells approaching failure
- •Busbar trunking systems feeding data hall power distribution units
- •PDU connections, circuit breakers, and server cabinet distribution
- •CRAC/CRAH unit electrical components and control systems
- •Generator and ATS equipment under load testing conditions
Related Services
Electrical Compliance
Complete electrical testing, inspection, and certification programs.
Arc Flash Assessment
High-voltage and low-voltage electrical hazard quantification.
UPS Maintenance
Uninterruptible power supply servicing including battery thermal profiling.
Power Quality Analysis
Harmonic distortion and electrical load testing to identify overheating causes.
PPM Delivery
Planned preventive maintenance integrating thermal survey schedules.
Data Room Audits
Server room and data centre infrastructure compliance assessments.
Frequently Asked Questions
Schedule Your Thermal Survey
Professional infrared electrical surveys identifying faults before they cause fires, failures, or injuries.
