the problem with mulimeters is thst they are battery dependent. flat battery = no reading. an approved voltage indicator should not rely on batteries to give a measurement of voltage.
true, im just saying that when the nic say no multimeters that is there own opinion and nothing more.

personally i prefer a martindale
 
Approved voltage indicators mean a set of leads that are not battery driven and also have fused test leads incorporated , such as the Drummond test leads I use , from the DNO days ...
These then are to be tested by a proving unit..
 
Approved voltage indicators mean a set of leads that are not battery driven and also have fused test leads incorporated , such as the Drummond test leads I use , from the DNO days ...
These then are to be tested by a proving unit..
nope, dont need a proving unit just a known source
 
Agreed they can be tested after using them, on known source ...

I have a proving unit also..
true there does seem to be a lot of mis information about, i was told that they were going away from fuses in test leads in favor of current limitation e.g. resistors.

after reading the gs38 doc by the hse i found its utter bollox and you can have either
 
There's a write up on our website in regard to voltage indicators and the recommendations for safe isolation. The details is taken from Electrical Safety First and it explains how multimeters, among other battery operated testers, are not recommended, not only because of the battery issue, but also because it is easy to set it to the wrong range and make a false measurement.

the full article is available here - Safe Isolation Procedures and The Right Test Equipment - Instrotech Ltd
 
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two-pole voltage detector Guidance Note GS38
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Gringoking88,
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