I have Load-Pro, I use it all the time and it finds faults fast.
I know Dan is a member on GJ, and I just want him to know its a great tool and turns an ordinary tech into a diagnostic specialist, I,m glad you are keeping the faith. I tell everyone I know how good this tool is and point anyone struggling with auto electrics towards your book and the Load-Pro.
I think it would be cool if you could sell a version/or design some screw on adaptors with 4mm banana plugs so I can utilise different types of probes for working on European vehicles as some of the multi plugs are so small nowadays.
aeswave have adpators the loadpro allows you to go to 4mm banana

I'm confused, is he unhappy about not making as much money as he thought he would with the load pro?
I own his book, a power probe, and other testing aids but, to me it seems like he feels his load pro should be in everyone's tool box but, is sad that it isn't yet.
The power probe has been around longer and applys ground or 12 volts with the flip of a switch. You can't pick up a trade magazine without seeing an ad for it.
I'm unfamiliar with the new waekon tool but, the tool business is probably more competitive than the actual auto industry. Imitation is the highest form of flattery.
Isn't there room for the load pro, powerprobe, and the Waekon tool in the marketplace?
It has been my experience that a great tool works it way into most tool boxes through solid proven performance and word of mouth rather than marketing. When it comes to meters, Fluke is the most common brand. I do own an ESI meter and although good, it doesn't have the name value of Fluke. Maybe he should have partnered with Fluke instead of ESI?![]()
They dont ship to the UK tried before with other stuff
If you find a source more local to us let me know.
Yup they do go onto live chat and ask them they posted me the adaptors and charged $9 postage came within 5 days
I'm proud to say that I understand enough about electricity to have seen the utility of the LoadPro and I've owned one for quite a while. I was a generator technician in the US Army and I fully understand the value of a voltage drop test. Dan's tool makes quick work of what is otherwise cumbersome and not always possible using the actual load.
Power Probe is a silly toy IMO - I can inject voltage and ground easily with a jumper wire or my portable jump-start pack and I don't need to pay a ton of money for a plastic box with a switch in it.
GD
I tend to use my Fluke meter set to amps as a jumper wire.
Can anyone tell me what his patent number is? If you have the product, it may be stated on the device.
I see it as a guy way too emotional and irrational over this waekon device. That Waekon device does far more than his one trick pony. The weakon is a logic probe with a voltmeter and a glitch capture and a pulsing probe too. It also loads resistance to a circuit that you open up just like the loadpro. I'd much much rather have the Waekon device. He should be working on improving his device and adding functionality (like waekon did) rather than grousing about his claims of "patent stealing".
As far as I can tell from his story weakon did nothing wrong. I've got news for him, that's business 101 that he encountered with Mr. Waekon. And that engineer is right, 50 ohms is essentially an open circuit for a wire. Might as well be anyway although not literally open; nothing is going to work.
He's selling a resistor with leads that partially and fixedly loads a circuit and acting like he invented the transistor. His tool isn't worth much as far as I am concerned, loading a circuit to see if the wire is dropping voltage just doesn't come up that much. And, it is far better to do it with the actual load hooked up when you do need to do it. This is a sideshow really, and not the holy grail of electrical diagnostic. I'd wager that people that bought his loadpro never use it.
He bags on every other tool maker's products like the power probe - you should see some of his rants against that - and now waekon. Waekon obviously thinks there are some big holes in his patent, either that it is invalid or that they don't infringe it. Patents aren't for little guys like this and if he thinks otherwise he is in for a rude awakening.
I watched the video... guy is a tool trying to sell a tool.
His patent evidently had some holes in it.
Example, if your patent describes an invention using a momentary push button, I may be able to circumvent your entire patent by using a latching rocker switch. Or by using glass and not plastic for an insulating part.
If it was such an 'open and shut' case then there would be PLENTY of law-dogs willing to work on a contingency (or a very small retainer).
I watched the video... guy is a tool trying to sell a tool.
His patent evidently had some holes in it.
Example, if your patent describes an invention using a momentary push button, I may be able to circumvent your entire patent by using a latching rocker switch. Or by using glass and not plastic for an insulating part.
If it was such an 'open and shut' case then there would be PLENTY of law-dogs willing to work on a contingency (or a very small retainer).
...It's still his idea and even if legally you can copy it by changing some small bit you are still an ****** for doing so...
AES# 08-717 Adapter
Two sides to every story and I have not heard the others side viewpoint.
Videos with emotional anecdotes like his 4 step kids starving or other nonsense is a sideshow and not the main show. He needs to state what he thinks are the facts and lay off the psychological starving family angle.
No, Dan Sullivan is an ordinary jobbing mechanic and a GJ member (like many of us on here) who devises training material to help techs get better (he has helped me do my job better and fix stuff better). He borrowed money from his parents to chase his dream and he got screwed over for "his idea". I will give him the benefit of the doubt over "The Big Shot" company any day.
Dan could have found the cure for cancer and saved a 100 orphans from a burning building, I still want to hear the other side of the story.
In the end, Dan maybe right and have a case. The issue is that there is to much emotional garbage intertwined with his making a case for his cause.
I get the "common man" persona he is portraying. I just find it irrelevant to the discussion if he has or has not a patent infringement case.
Send them an e-mail and ask them to come join the discussion, if you really want to hear their side of things.
Good luck getting an answer![]()
Then what? Lack of input from them makes your case?
The issue is a business issue and any true business is not going to make their case of public opinion on some internet tool board.
I am sure people form an opinion all the time with only one side of the story. People also get bite in the *** when the real truth is something in-between.

Patent numberCan anyone tell me what his patent number is? If you have the product, it may be stated on the device.
I'm proud to say that I understand enough about electricity to have seen the utility of the LoadPro and I've owned one for quite a while. I was a generator technician in the US Army and I fully understand the value of a voltage drop test. Dan's tool makes quick work of what is otherwise cumbersome and not always possible using the actual load.
Power Probe is a silly toy IMO - I can inject voltage and ground easily with a jumper wire or my portable jump-start pack and I don't need to pay a ton of money for a plastic box with a switch in it.
GD