Already have one that checks polarity. And the one from Lee Valley which just helped me find the breaker for my outdoor plugs! Mine predate having to have a separate breaker. But I still want to replace them with the gfi outlets I bought. Might only need one gif if I can figure out which plus is first in the run. Then I'd put the other on my outdoor a/c rv receptacle.
But the answer is no, it does not detect or identify an outlet unless it is not tripped. If it’s tripped at the panel or a GFI you have to reset it first.
@@Noemailads since no one’s answered my question, I purchased the circuit breaker and find out for myself. It does not work if the power outlet has no power.
Good job Jim! Do you have any idea why in the accessory package you bought they include a 2-prong socket adapter and not a 3-prong given the transmitter is 3-pronged? Seems like the 2 to 3 prong adapter is an unnecessary step if they went with a 3-prong adapter.
Thank you. Its easier to use than the last Circuit breaker tester I reviewed. Just hit power button and scan panel, I like the transmitter it tells you if wiring is correct. The socket adapter was not included. Only think I didn't like was the beeping when I was doing the video that gets annoying.
Does anyone have experience using this tool with an electrical panel that utilizes tandem breakers? Can it pinpoint the correct individual circuit on the tandem breaker device (hope this question makes sense :)?
can this be used to find what breaker controls a switch? The switch controls an outdoor light which has stopped working. I'd rather not work on a live circuit (I'm just a home owner, not an electrician). It's kind of a catch-22 - I can't find the breaker since the lamp has stopped working, and I can't get the lamp working without removing the device and testing. (it's an LED lamp where the bulb is permanent).
This Breaker finder will work but you need to put the transmitter in the socket of the light. You could shut your whole electrical panel off to remove and check it.
@@JimMcLaren1950 thanks. There is no socket for the light. It's in soldered on LED bulb. I could disassemble it and use alligator clips to the leaves, but I think it would be more prudent to turn off the main panel, as you suggested
Just picked one of these up. I'm more of a hands-on visual learner than a manual reader. Thanks for the instructional video.
Your welcome.
I am fascinated by the knife.
The knife cut the package easily. The blade is definately sharper.
Good video! The only thing I’d recommend is the small zipper bag to keep the entire kit together. Klein does offer one for $16 bones.
Thank you
Already have one that checks polarity. And the one from Lee Valley which just helped me find the breaker for my outdoor plugs! Mine predate having to have a separate breaker. But I still want to replace them with the gfi outlets I bought. Might only need one gif if I can figure out which plus is first in the run. Then I'd put the other on my outdoor a/c rv receptacle.
does it work if there is no power to the transmitter?
No one ever answers this question, such an important basic question and no answer.
But the answer is no, it does not detect or identify an outlet unless it is not tripped. If it’s tripped at the panel or a GFI you have to reset it first.
@@Noemailads since no one’s answered my question, I purchased the circuit breaker and find out for myself. It does not work if the power outlet has no power.
Could they have made that light socket into a three prong connector instead of two prongs?
Good job Jim! Do you have any idea why in the accessory package you bought they include a 2-prong socket adapter and not a 3-prong given the transmitter is 3-pronged? Seems like the 2 to 3 prong adapter is an unnecessary step if they went with a 3-prong adapter.
Yes I was wondering why myself they just didn't make the 3 prong adapter
Great review. Anything you didn't like about it. How did it compare to the other testers you've reviewed?
Thank you. Its easier to use than the last Circuit breaker tester I reviewed. Just hit power button and scan panel, I like the transmitter it tells you if wiring is correct. The socket adapter was not included. Only think I didn't like was the beeping when I was doing the video that gets annoying.
Thanks buddy
Your welcome.
Does anyone have experience using this tool with an electrical panel that utilizes tandem breakers? Can it pinpoint the correct individual circuit on the tandem breaker device (hope this question makes sense :)?
can this be used to find what breaker controls a switch? The switch controls an outdoor light which has stopped working. I'd rather not work on a live circuit (I'm just a home owner, not an electrician). It's kind of a catch-22 - I can't find the breaker since the lamp has stopped working, and I can't get the lamp working without removing the device and testing. (it's an LED lamp where the bulb is permanent).
This Breaker finder will work but you need to put the transmitter in the socket of the light. You could shut your whole electrical panel off to remove and check it.
@@JimMcLaren1950 thanks. There is no socket for the light. It's in soldered on LED bulb. I could disassemble it and use alligator clips to the leaves, but I think it would be more prudent to turn off the main panel, as you suggested
I wish I could find one that worked in a not-live environment.
You can use a low voltage tone generator. Just make sure the power is off or you'll fry the generator.
You'd probably need one that had a battery at either end?