Word count: ~1,200 Reading time: 5 minutes
A: Partially. Old models have smaller holes and no color coding. The easy to follow new method works but requires magnification. holed abella danger easy to follow new
Do not use metal probes on the “danger” holes—this can short a circuit if your Abella version includes electronic sensors. Part 4: Step-by-Step Implementation (Easy to Follow) Step 1: Identify the Holed Face Place the Abella unit on a stable surface. The “holed” side is usually marked with a small triangle. In the new design, the holes are larger (4mm vs 2.5mm) for better visibility. Step 2: Map the Danger Zone Using your calibration card, overlay it onto the holed face. The card has transparent rings. The danger holes are those that align with a red ring. On average, a standard Abella has 12 holes: 3 danger, 9 safe. Step 3: The “Easy Follow” Sequence Insert the non-conductive probe into each safe hole first (green-coded). Push gently until you hear a soft click. This preloads the mechanism. Word count: ~1,200 Reading time: 5 minutes A: Partially