penberth3
Well-Known Member
Please re-read my post - paragraph one clearly states it is vital to properly check for no power, and having disconnected the mains, WITH A METER...
Or a suitable test lamp.
Please re-read my post - paragraph one clearly states it is vital to properly check for no power, and having disconnected the mains, WITH A METER...
First check your tester on something you know is live, then check the circuit you're working on, then check the tester again on a known live.
Edit: Superheat says the same thing above.
haha, noooooo the idea is to isolate it FIRST
then double check with the pliars rather than your fingas !!
Just as in real life, this forum seems to substantiate the view that when you get five so-called experts in a room together, you will end up with at least seven different opinions.
What pisses me off very slightly is that some people on here either don't bother to read the whole thread through first before commenting; or they do, then regurgitate previous comments as if they thought of them first.
...This does assume that the meter is digital, if you have a meter with an analogue indicator tie something heavy round it and throw it in the sea
It is called “proving” ie prove your meter works, get a reading on a live circuit, isolate (this is a physical disconnection, like removing the shore cable or provide a lock) check for circuit being dead, then PROVE you meter still works by testing on a known live or a proving unit (small battery 230 v ac supply giving only enough current to make the meter register.)
This does assume that the meter is digital, if you have a meter with an analogue indicator tie something heavy round it and throw it in the sea
What exactly is the problem with analogue meters?
They have a place in an electronics workshop due to their inherent damping which can show a slow response. They have too high an internal resistance to register an electronic proving unit. If you really like the action of amn analogue display buy a decent Fluke which has a digital analogue display
At the risk of being flamed twice in one week about electrical stuff, I don't think your second sentence is quite right. Analogue meters were typically 50 micro amps full scale deflection., DVMs have a much higher input impedance, therefore do not load the circuit being tested so much. The sample and hold circuit at the front end of the A to D converter may cause a problem in very very delicate circuits like I used to work on when microprobing failed ICs but this won't be a problem for people testing out their boat electrics.
Out of interest, is the general procedure to first check that your "live line detector" still works by testing it when the line is expected to still be live, then isolate and try again? Just wondering how you tell the difference between "not live" and "handheld broken". I had some excitement in the past from someone bodging and bypassing mains in my house :|