Electric fence tester

   / Electric fence tester #1  

Parfleche

Silver Member
Joined
Apr 26, 2006
Messages
107
Location
WA
Tractor
NH tc35a
Hello,
I have looked at electric fence testers, $40 and up. Can a fence be tested with a cheaper multimeter? If so how do I do it? This is a battery 12 volt battery powered fence and I need to know when to recharge the deep cell battery. I have an extra battery for changing out but I don't know when to do it?

Thank you and kind regards,
Steve
 
Last edited:
   / Electric fence tester #2  
most 12v fence chargers will still work pretty well when the battery voltage gets down to 8 volts, some even 6: but they make a little tester that has neon lights in it: its usually around 5-10 bucks: an it will generally tell you what you need to know...some of the units made in the last few years will light all the lights, plus some if they were there, but it will still tell you if the output gets low..
heehaw
 
   / Electric fence tester #3  
We often touched the wire with the pickup bumper and if it was working Willie Nelson would sing about 3 octaves higher with some static.
 
   / Electric fence tester #5  
Doesn't Willie have a little static even without the hot wire?

The few fence chargers I have bump up the voltage to a few thousand volts, I thought. And they are pulsed which a digital multimeter does not read so swell due to high voltage and pulsing. The multimeters I have are only good for a thousand volts. Google fence tester for a number of $10 testers that do the basics.

Read around about sulfate and batteries. Letting the battery run down past a certain voltage is kind of hard on the battery. If possible a solar charger/tender migth let that battery last longer.
 
   / Electric fence tester #6  
I read a while back about someone who connected the 2 ends of a fluor tube to the hot wire and it would fire the bulb when it pulsed. Never tried it personally but sounded good at the time.

Got my tester from Premier Fence out of Iowa.
 
   / Electric fence tester #7  
We use a "5 light" tester. The more lights, the hotter the fence. We also sell them. Ken Sweet
 

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   / Electric fence tester
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Thank you everyone!

Kind Regards,
Steve
 
   / Electric fence tester #9  
You want about 7000 volts to have a sufficient zap to keep the critters on the right side. 9000 is really good. When it drops, that probably means it's grounded somewhere from grass or something touching the wire.

Get a cheap tester and test it all over the place--it can be hot near the charge controller and weak somewhere else.
 
   / Electric fence tester #10  
Hello,
I have looked at electric fence testers, $40 and up. Can a fence be tested with a cheaper multimeter? If so how do I do it? This is a battery 12 volt battery powered fence and I need to know when to recharge the deep cell battery. I have an extra battery for changing out but I don't know when to do it?

Thank you and kind regards,
Steve

Several have said how to test the fence charger output, but if you want to avoid ruining 12v deep cycle batteries you really need to test the battery also. Even though the fence may work down to a much lower voltage from the battery you will be shortening the life of the 12 v battery greatly if you let it get too low.
A cheap multimeter will let you know when to recharge or swap out, I'd not let it get below 11.5 volts if you want it to last long term.
 
   / Electric fence tester #11  
Just gotta tell the story on "Pa" - he had put in a small section of two-wire fence for the donkeys with a little TSC solar charger. After a few weeks, he determined that it wasn't working, because he could touch the wires and not get jolted. So one of his sons told him, "why, you're not feeling any charge because you're not grounded! Take your shoes and socks off and try it again!" And he DID. It was working just fine! Us bystanders really enjoyed the little dance he did!
;-)

- Jay
 
   / Electric fence tester #12  
My 99 yr old neighbor checks his electric fence in the summertime with a blade of grass about 6-8 inches long. He first touches the green blade to the tip of the grass and if he feels a tingle there he knows it is fine. If not he keeps sliding the blade closer to the wire until he feels a tingle. This gives him a sense of how hot the charger is without having to go hunt the fence checker. I have tried it and it works. Ken Sweet
 
   / Electric fence tester #13  
We use a "5 light" tester. The more lights, the hotter the fence. We also sell them. Ken Sweet

This what we use and works better than anything else we have tried. Be careful with the length of leads. I tired a cheap multi-meter with 1" long alligator clips and the fence bypassed the alligator clips and arced in to my finger. It took me a long time to find where that multi-meter landed.
 
   / Electric fence tester #17  
Someone told me that you can't really get shocked this way. Sounds like a good subject for MythBusters to try out. :)


Or maybe one of our braver TBNers :confused: Forget the photos.

Someone lied to you!!! :D And I don't need "MythBusters" either! :confused2: :shocked: :shocked: :shocked: :mur: No pics please! :D grnspot110
 
   / Electric fence tester #18  
Someone told me that you can't really get shocked this way. Sounds like a good subject for MythBusters to try out. :)


Or maybe one of our braver TBNers :confused: Forget the photos.

Mythbusters already did a story about it. The old story about peeing on the 3rd rail of an electric train. Maybe you can get them to try an electric fencer. :laughing:
 
   / Electric fence tester #19  
Someone lied to you!!! :D And I don't need "MythBusters" either! :confused2: :shocked: :shocked: :shocked: :mur: No pics please! :D grnspot110


That was funny. :)
 
   / Electric fence tester #20  
A good 5 mile charger, (4) 8' brass grounds connected in parallel 10' apart, and some crispy shiny stainless steel connectors. Touch that about 10' from the charger and you will taste metal all day. Not to mention the unavoidable bad attitude you will have the rest of the day that comes with this.
 

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