We present a novel electrical technique to measure the tension of wires in
multi-wire drift chambers. We create alternating electric fields by biasing
adjacent wires on both sides of a test wire with a superposition of positive
and negative DC voltages on an AC signal (VAC±VDC). The
resulting oscillations of the wire will display a resonance at its natural
frequency, and the corresponding change of the capacitance will lead to a
measurable current. This scheme is scalable to multiple wires and therefore
enables us to precisely measure the tension of a large number of wires in a
short time. This technique can also be applied at cryogenic temperatures making
it an attractive solution for future large time-projection chambers such as the
DUNE detector. We present the concept, an example implementation and its
performance in a real-world scenario and discuss the limitations of the
sensitivity of the system in terms of voltage and wire length.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures. Accepted by NIM