View Full Version : Non-Contact DC Detector
big john
11-18-2009, 01:48 PM
Once upon a time I swear I saw an ad for a non-contact DC voltage detector, but for the life of me I can't find it. It was a pen-style just like the AC ones that are so common.
I work with a ton of 125VDC controls and it would be fantastic to be able to stick a little detector into a nest of wires to see if I had any hots.
Anyone heard of a device like this or know where it could be found?
Thanks.
-John
eric9822
11-18-2009, 03:54 PM
Extech makes one, model number 401050. Google "Non Contact Voltage Detector DC" and you will see others.
wptski
11-18-2009, 11:40 PM
Extech makes one, model number 401050. Google "Non Contact Voltage Detector DC" and you will see others.
That Extech model is a non-contact AC detector but a contact DC detector from 1.5V-36VDC.
eric9822
11-19-2009, 01:42 AM
That Extech model is a non-contact AC detector but a contact DC detector from 1.5V-36VDC.
My mistake, you are correct. I had one years and I was pretty sure it was made by Extech.
StephenSDH
11-19-2009, 07:12 AM
If there is such a thing I don't know how it would detect the DC.
If there is such a thing I don't know how it would detect the DC.
In theory, if you wave it back and forth in a DC feild it might work :)
In theory, if you wave it back and forth in a DC field it might work :)
I thought that was what an electrostatic voltmeter did for you?
I have used them to measure surface (electrostatic) charge but never attempted to use them on an electrical DC source wire. Seems like as long as the DC source voltage was higher than the "noise level" electrostatic charge on the wire surface that it could work?
big john
11-19-2009, 12:59 PM
That Extech model is a non-contact AC detector but a contact DC detector from 1.5V-36VDC.Yeah, that's all I've been able to find as well.
If there is such a thing I don't know how it would detect the DC.I don't know, either. That's why I was sorta hoping, but maybe no such animal.
Nuts. Maybe what I want doesn't exist. I know they sell "current sensors." I wonder if they have a hall-effect wand for DC...?
-John
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