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Title: EV Texas Expansion Drives Demand as Code Changes Create Installation Challenges

Allen, TX, United States, 31st Jan 2026 - As Tesla ramps up Optimus robot production at Giga Texas and expands statewide operations, ABR Electric addresses growing demand for home EV charging while navigating significant electrical code changes affecting Tesla owners considering home charging."Here you are, we're in a new era. It's a new time. Fantastic new vehicles—but there's some challenges," explains James Adams, master electrician at ABR Electric. Tesla's Texas presence means more Model Y, Model 3, and Cybertruck deliveries in Dallas-Fort Worth, but homeowners face new electrical requirements that didn't exist previously.The 2020 National Electrical Code Article 625-54 mandates Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter protection for EV charging circuits, affecting Tesla Wall Connector installations. "We've had electric cars nuisance trip that GFCI breaker," Adams notes. "Nobody likes charging overnight only to wake up realizing it stopped at 11 PM because the breaker tripped."Many North Texas homes cannot accommodate required two-pole 50-amp GFCI breakers. "If you've got a pinto panel in your house, make a plan and change it," Adams advises, referencing older Federal Pacific, Zinsco, and Pushmatic panels. "If your panel is humming or hot to touch, it needs to go."Tesla's investment creates opportunity and complexity. Giga Texas produces vehicles and will manufacture millions of Optimus robots while expanding Supercharger networks. This translates to more deliveries in Allen, McKinney, Frisco, and Plano—areas where ABR Electric provides specialized installation services."Tesla's investment creates excitement and more EVs on our roads," said Adams. "We ensure safe, high-speed home charging so families charge efficiently and cost-effectively, even as Tesla shifts focus to rob...


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