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INTRO TO COSTRUCTION 150 ELECTRONICS FOR ELECTRICANS SPRING 2014. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTcdJ6tNXrQ. IPHONE 7 ?. TOOLS OF THE TRADE. (ELECTRICAN). VOLTAGE TESTERS. VOLTAGE DETECTOR PEN. TEST EQUIPMENT. MULTIMETER. IR THERMOMETER. REALLY NICE MULTIMETERS.
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INTRO TO COSTRUCTION 150 ELECTRONICS FOR ELECTRICANS SPRING 2014
TOOLS OF THE TRADE (ELECTRICAN)
VOLTAGE DETECTOR PEN TEST EQUIPMENT MULTIMETER IR THERMOMETER
TOOLS OF THE TRADE ELECTRONIC TECH’S TOOL KIT
Soldering Station - Temperature Controlled Solder Iron about 100$
ELECTRICAN’S DKYES AND NEDDLE NOSE PLIERS ELECTRONICS TECH’S DKYES AND NEDDLE NOSE PLIERS
6 Piece Precision Pliers Set Pittsburgh - item#31675 Only: $12.99 Sale: $6.99 HARBOR FREIGHT Collin's Lab: Electronics Tools . http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kv7Y8nAOoFE&list=SPDE23FAC8A681FA46
Grounding: A basic rule for working around electrical equipment: if you are yourself not grounded, and if you only touch one single component at a time, risks are reduced. Never ground yourself through your feet. Don't stand on a wet floor. If it's necessary to touch electrical components in such a location, a trained electrical worker uses a dry ungrounded platform such as boards or a wooden ladder. Rings and watches: When working around electrical equipment, first remove rings and watches to reduce the risk of electric shock. At an IBM test site in Poughkeepsie, NY in the 1980's a test technician was killed while working on a computer. His metal watch band contacted a live component while other body parts were touching a grounded component, possibly the steel frame of the assembly. Similar accidents around electric panels are a real risk for home inspectors.
Never Assume You've Turned Power Off - Use a Neon Tester, Voltage Detector, or Multimeter NEON TESTER The most basic electrical safety procedure I can think of when working on electrical devices or electrical wiring involves knowing how to: turn off power to the device or circuit or system where you're planning to work make sure that power is really OFF. I never touch something electrical that I've "turned off" without using at least a neon tester to or a voltage detection pen to see that electrical power is really off. In 1970 I turned off power to a junction box to fix a light - the light went out - so I figured that all electrical power to the junction box was really off. Then while wiggling wires in the junction box I got a huge spark and a little shock. Some nitwit had run two different live circuits into the same junction box.