TeeJayHoward |
11-18-2022 06:41 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by jgurnari
(Post 11851564)
thanks but don’t know what that means!
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A switch is just a disconnected circuit that gets connected when you push the button. So most switches will have (at least) two wires.
Get a multimeter. Almost any multimeter will work. Turn the knob or push all the buttons until you get to the functionality where it goes BEEP when the two probes touch each other. That's called a continuity test. (At least, in my mind. There's probably an EE on this board who can give out the right term.)
Now, connect the probes to the two wires on the switch. One probe on each wire. It won't beep, because the circuit is normally open. (At least, assuming the switch is of the type that isn't latching, and isn't normally closed.) Push the switch button. You should hear a beep from the multimeter. If the beep doesn't stop, it means that it is a latching switch. If it only beeps while your finger is pushing the switch down, it means that it's a traditional switch. If it doesn't beep at all, either the switch is broken, complex, or part of a circuit which requires power. 99% of the time, it'll mean it's broken. Or that one of the probes got disconnected. Hate it when that happens.
There you go. Switch tested.
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