Phantom Voltage???

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use a wiggy to measure it. ive seen this many times with people that use high impedance meters. i have a fluke 117 with a lo impedance function that i use when i suspect something like that is up
 
Marc, what kind of meter can i use to not get "phantom voltage"...the only reason why i broke out the meter was because my volt-pen was reading hot with the switch off and when i tested it i got those readings...
 
Mr. Bait, two things:

If you're measuring voltage across the fixture with the bulb in place, somethin is wrong. The load should be enough to eliminate phantom voltage.

The non-contact tester may be indicating that the neutral, and not the hot, is being switched. It responds to voltage to earth, not between points.

Added:
NolaTigaBait said:
thanks, i'll look into a low-impedence meter
Measuring voltage across a load accomplishes the same thing. Even a 7-watt night-light bulb works.
 
LarryFine said:
Mr. Bait, two things:

If you're measuring voltage across the fixture with the bulb in place, somethin is wrong. The load should be enough to eliminate phantom voltage.

Why is this? I've had a similar problem before with a starter coil?
 
I dont believe in ghost voltage. Every voltage is there for a reason and if you cant figure it out keep learning until you can figure it out. Voltage can be a complicated study.
 
quogueelectric said:
I dont believe in ghost voltage. Every voltage is there for a reason and if you cant figure it out keep learning until you can figure it out. Voltage can be a complicated study.

It is not ghost voltage it is phantom voltage and if you take the time to follow the link I posted you will learn what the reason for it is.
 
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