All:
Hopefully Tom or one of you electrician types can answer this, or laugh or 
whatever.
I have a friend who occasionally sends me posts from one of the O&M Lists he's 
on.  Yesterday he sent one dealing with the necessity of always pressing the 
activation button on traffic signals that cycle based on the presence of 
vehicles as opposed to a fixed time increment.  
The problem is that at least here, there's no way to tell for certain what 
actually causes a given traffic light or signal to cycle.  So, presumably, the 
safest course would be to always press a button when one was present (they 
usually are BTW).  
The difficulty is then, to find the buttons to press where there's no audible 
signal, (which is of course generally the case.

I work a dog, so naturally, the dog's going to treat a pole with a button just 
the same as it would treat any other obstacle, and avoid it.  I understand 
there are "sonic guide" type devices that you could perhaps use that would beep 
or vibrate when they passed a pole, but that would probably give too many hits, 
since it would see trees, sign posts etc. as well as light poles.  Flailing 
around with a cane or in my case, a whip antenna isn't really a satisfactory 
way to do this either.
Finally, I've been told there are devices which emit a sound when they're 
locked on to an electrical current, presumably this is because of the presence 
of a magnetic field.  Would it be possible to modify such a device so that it 
would beep or vibrate or whatever when it "saw" poles with electric current 
present inside them?

My thought is that you probably wouldn't carry something like this around all 
the time, but it would be useful for finding poles and then knowing where they 
are, I could certainly train my dog to find them again.

Any thoughts?

Bill Stephan
Kansas Citty MO
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Phone: (816)803-2469

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