// Project Gridhack · Field Fleet

Grid Response Team

If you saw a black and neon-green car with "Grid Response Unit" on the side, that's us. Project Gridhack's residential field fleet — Texas, Utah, Wyoming.

Gridhack is the company. Project Gridhack is the brand. Grid Response Team (and the individual Grid Response Units rolling on each car) is the field operation — the people and the vehicles that show up at the address.

If a Grid Response Unit is parked on your street, a homeowner nearby is either getting their roof surveyed, getting a system installed, or getting service on one we already put in. Worth a wave.

The Build

Custom company livery — black base, neon-green accents, "Project Gridhack" wordmark, "Grid Response Unit" badging. The wrap is intentional: the cars are part of the brand, and they signal that the work happens in person, in your neighborhood, with people whose names you can call.

// Unit Spec Sheet
GRID RESPONSE UNIT 01
LiveryBlack base · neon-green accents
MarkingsProject Gridhack wordmark · Grid Response Unit badge
Operating TerritoryTexas · Utah · Wyoming
RoleSurveys · installs · on-site service

What the Team Actually Does

Replaces the homeowner's primary power source. Instead of paying the utility (Oncor in Texas, Rocky Mountain Power in Utah and Wyoming, Black Hills Energy in Cheyenne, the local co-op out in the rural counties) for grid electricity, the homeowner pays Gridhack for the energy our solar + battery system produces on their roof.

Read the full mechanic: What is a utility swap? · See the brand explainer: What is Project Gridhack?

Where You'll See a Grid Response Unit

Texas — Oncor service territory primarily. Dallas, Fort Worth, the DFW metro, Plano, Frisco, McKinney, Arlington, the surrounding suburbs and small towns. Oncor coverage · Dallas · Fort Worth

Utah — Wasatch Front and beyond. Salt Lake City, Provo, Ogden, St. George, plus the smaller municipal and rural co-op territories. Utah coverage · Salt Lake City

Wyoming — Rocky Mountain Power, Black Hills Energy, Cheyenne LF&P, Lower Valley, and the rural electric co-ops. Cheyenne, Casper, Laramie, the Wind River basin, the Big Horn region. Wyoming coverage · Cheyenne

Want a Grid Response Unit at Your Address?

Run a check on your home. We'll tell you straight whether your roof, utility, and bill profile are a fit. Not everyone needs a utility swap, and we won't pretend otherwise — but for the right home, the math is worth a look.

Run a Check on My Address Read the Full Explainer

Want to Drive One?

The Grid Response Team is built around field setters and closers. The role is door-knocking, homeowner conversations, and field generation in your local territory — the entry point most people start with. Closers handle the in-home appointments and the math.

If you want one of these on your driveway, the path is to join the team.

Open Roles Setter Role Detail

Quick Answers

Is the Grid Response Team a government or utility?

No. Project Gridhack is a private residential energy company. The "Grid Response" framing is about how we approach the work, not about being any kind of agency.

What's with the black and green colors?

It's the company brand. Black base, neon-green accents — same palette as the shirts, the signage, and the website. Visible at distance, hard to mistake for anything else.

How many Grid Response Units are on the road?

Growing. The fleet expands with the team. Each new territory a closer covers tends to mean another wrapped unit on the road.

Can I get a Grid Response sticker / shirt / hat?

Reach out at gridhack.io/#contact and ask. The shop is small but it exists.

Is the Grid Response Team the same as Project Gridhack?

Different word for the same operation. Project Gridhack is the brand and movement. Grid Response Team is the field arm — the people and vehicles. Same company (Gridhack), same mission, same homeowners.