The purpose of this study was to assess the role of conductance catheter position within the right ventricle in obtaining adequate indications of phasic changes in ventricular volume. Possible applications of this technology are in rate responsive pacemakers and implantable defibrilators. The conductance catheter was placed in the right ventricle by cannulation of a jugular or femoral vein or a branch of the pulmonary artery. Position within the ventricle was documented from biplane fluoroscopy. Stroke volume was perturbed by: bolus injection of blood, vagal stimulation, venous infusion of methylcholine chloride, or isoprenaline. Four criteria were used to assess the quality of volume signals: (1) volume signal phase relative to the electrocardiogram; (2) magnitude parity of volume change from each electrode pair; (3) freedom from artifact; and (4) indication of stroke volume change during interventions. Greyhound dogs of either sex (n = 33), weight 20-32 kg. A total of 236 recordings from 14 distinct catheter positions were analyzed. Catheter positions originating from a femoral cannulation and one position from the pulmonary artery gave markedly superior volume transduction compared to those from the jugular route. Although right ventricular volume transduction was possible from all catheter trajectories, those resulting from the femoral approach were clearly superior. In the right ventricle, the inability to transduce a sufficient proportion of ventricular volume, in concert with the potential sensitivity of the catheter to atrial volume changes, may seriously limit the potential of the conductance technique in the applications envisaged.