Hi Paul,

First, I would caution you from holding the hipot test lead while the tester is 
in operation. It
could certainly be hazardous to your health, and all that. I wonder if this is 
one of those "don't
try this at home" cases.

Anyway, in another life while undergoing an initial BABT 340 quality system 
audit, the auditor asked
us "How do we know that the tester is working properly, and how do you know the 
tester will give a
failure indication when expected?" Well, these were questions we had not 
anticipated and were
unprepared with a quick answer. To meet the auditor's challenge, however, we 
fashioned a setup that
verified the complete tester, including cables. This verification setup 
included 2 resistors (one
for hipot and the other for ground continuity). The values for each resistor 
were selected so that
the testers would indicate a failure at just over the current trip point of 
each tester. To verify
the setup each day, the testers were tested using these resistors (a failure 
indication was a pass
and a pass indication was a failure). The resistors and the test equipment were 
all placed on a
routine calibration cycle. This satisfied BABT and other safety agencies that 
performed the
facility/product audits.

I hope this helps.

Best regards,

Ron Pickard
[email protected]



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