Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems.

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Default testing for wires behind wood panelling

Could somebody tell me how I could discover wires behind wood plywood
panelling of an older house?

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Bill Jeffrey
 
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Go to the electrical department at Home Depot or Lowes and buy what I
call a "squeaker". More properly called, I think, a non-contact voltage
tester. It looks like a fountain pen. When you squeeze the pocket clip
against the body, it chirps once. Then if you hold the tip near an
energized wire, it chirps continuously.

There are two variants. One is labelled "100-250 volts". You must hold
it within an inch or so of a 120VAC wire to make it chirp, so this may
not work for you if the wires are buried back between the wall studs.
But there is a "low voltage version" - mine says "12-90 VAC" that can
detect a 120 VAC wire from considerably farther away. This is probably
what you want. Mine is made by GB Instruments, model GVD-504LV (the LV
suffix meaning "low voltage").

If you don't have a Home Depot or Lowe's near you, the standard version
of these things is often available at Ace Hardware, etc - or on eBay -
but I'm not sure about the low-voltage version. Still, they are not
expensive, so try it out.

Bill Jeffrey
=========================

wrote:
Could somebody tell me how I could discover wires behind wood plywood
panelling of an older house?


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Thanks for the info Bill, much appreciated. I have a tester that only
works with drywall, guess it's back to the store.

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NSM
 
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wrote in message
ups.com...
Could somebody tell me how I could discover wires behind wood plywood
panelling of an older house?


My dollar store sold some pen/screwdriver gadgets to do that.
--
N


















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spudnuty
 
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Is the wire open or shielded, BX or conduit, carrying AC? low voltage?
If it's like telephone or computer cable I've used a Tripplette Fox and
Hound to do this. Check it out he

http://www.newark.com/product-detail...alog/5331.html

I wonder whether you could use a small transmitter and detuned AM
pocket radio or two kluged toy AM walkie talkies to do this job.

I've also used my kids play metal detector to trace out larger metal BX
and conduit buried in walls.

Richard

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