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• 1-800-282-6631 TROUBLESHOOTING FENCES 17

Troubleshooting Electric Fences

How to find the fault(s)

First, re-attach the fence and ground

wires to the energizer and turn it on.

Then, you must walk or ride along the

fence looking for situations that are

reducing the voltage.

If the fence is at fault…

b. HT wire, twine or rope fences—

look for:

• Damaged or broken insulators

(see

examples on p. 15)

.

• Any point where an energized

wire touches the soil, a steel or

wood post or a nonenergized wire.

Separate them.

• Branches lying on the fence and

forcing wires together

(at right)

.

Remove them.

1. If you have a Fault Finder (p. 103), use it. The arrow will tell you which direction the energy is flowing (leaking). Follow the fence from the energizer outward. Move in the direction of the arrow, testing as you go until you arrive at the problem. Note: Fault Finders can tell which section of net is at fault if you touch it to the clips where 2 nets join. But they are not able to locate the exact location within a net because energy flows in multiple directions within a net.

2. If you don’t have a Fault Finder (and

do have a voltmeter or fence tester):

Walk or drive along the fence.

a. Netting—

look for:

• The lowest live strand

against the metal spike near

the soil

(also see p. 13)

.

• Damaged or broken strands

touching the ground.

• Netting touching a wire

fence or steel post.

Fence testing mistakes

• Standard multimeters are not able

to test fences (fence voltage is too

high). Use a fence voltmeter.

• If receiving an inconsistent fence

reading, check voltmeter’s battery.

Insulated animals

Some animals/predators standing

on dry soil or snow may not receive

an adequate shock from a properly

energized fence.

Why? Dry soil and snow (if it’s not

damp) act as insulators that reduce

the ability of the energizer’s electric

pulse to pass through an animal.

If this is the case—Pos/Neg fences

or wide-impedance energizers are

better adapted for such situations.

c. Listen for snapping sounds

as

you walk along a fence. These

occur when a conductor is close to

a grounded wire, stake, large green

weed or tree.

d.

Separate the fence into parts by turning off switches— if it’s an HT permanent wire fence, or by disconnecting portions of electric netting. Then progressively reconnect it, checking voltage as you do so. When the voltage suddenly drops, you’ve found the area with the problem (the section you just connected or switched on).

before

after