Safety is everything. So, being sure the power is off before you open electrical equipment and start handling wiring matters. But how can you be safe and be sure the circuit is de-energized? What if the only acceptable method is a complex testing process that potentially exposes you to the very danger you’re trying to avoid? This is the story of how a team of engineers, some fresh thinking, and years in the lab resulted in an entirely new product category – absence of voltage testers (AVTs) – and positive proof the power is off.
To understand why the VeriSafe AVT is such a big deal, you have to understand three things:
You might think a hard-wired voltage indicator would solve the problem – lights out means no power – but you’d be wrong. Indicators warn when power is on, but no signal doesn’t guarantee that a circuit is de-energized. No light could mean the power is off, but it could also be caused by a faulty indicator or installation problems. How would you know the difference? That uncertainty is why OSHA never recognized permanently installed voltage indicators and instead relied on the hand-held tester method. But that means in order to prove there’s no voltage in the de-energized circuit you have to expose yourself to a known-live circuit. The very definition of irony!
Through years of development and collaboration with industry groups, the team was able to reach proof of concept and eventually create an absence of voltage tester that performed exactly as they hoped. All that was left was for the new AVT product category to be defined in an industry standard and for the safety requirements to be published. In 2016, UL published the first-ever AVT safety and listing requirements in UL 1436. In 2017, the VeriSafe AVT was released and now offers workers an easy, safer way to get positive proof the system is de-energized before accessing or working on electrical equipment.
Now all it takes is a press of the test button, and a moment to wait for the green light. And, as everybody knows, green means go.