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Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] O2 And CO2 Guages



Hi you all.
one of the best oxygen sensors on the market today, used in many subsea
aplecations and prefered by me is the Draeger OxyGauge, cost 70,00 $
and has a 36 month lifeexpectency in air.
Check out the wep page: http://oxycheq.com or go the the rebreather pages. 
Diver daves 3-sensor PPO2.
keep up the work. Michael Wludarczyk






>From: William Alford <walford@dbtech.net>
>Reply-To: personal_submersibles@psubs.org
>To: rocketjake@yahoo.com, personal_submersibles@psubs.org
>Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] O2 And CO2 Guages
>Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2003 10:04:02 -0600
>
>At 06:44 PM 1/9/2003 -0800, Jake Colman wrote:
> >I am looking for some inexpencive (not for my sub)
> >Carbon Dioxide and Oxygen meters/Guages. I am
> >looking to spend not much more that 20$(U.S.)
>
>I assume you mean "pressure gauges", not "analyzers". If so, you cannot
>beat monitoring eBay.com. I've bought much scientific and laboratory
>equipment (often new in the box) there for pennies on the dollar. Since
>most auctions are completed in 3 - 5 days, if the object that is desired is
>not there when one first looks, then one must return and search again often
>and, sooner or later, it will turn up. Not only that but I learned that I
>must search for the same object in multiple searches with variations on the
>name. For instance, looking for an oxygen gauge, I had to do searches for:
>oxygen meter, oxygen monitor, oxygen gauge, O2 meter, O2 monitor, O2 gauge,
>etc. Searching for just the single keyword such as oxygen may also turn up
>items that the seller has entered with a misspelling, such as oxygen guage
>(sic). Of course many irrelevant items (hundreds!) will also turn up on
>such a broad search and require more time to sort through.
>
>I use MicroSoft Internet Explorer as a web search engine and so created
>*searches* as “Favorites” to save for repeating the same searches. To do
>this, I first opened the “Favorites” window by clicking on the “Favorites”
>button in the IExplorer  toolbar. Then I created a folder by clicking on
>“add” in the “Favorites” window, then clicked “New Folder” and gave it the
>name “eBay”. Then I went to www.ebay.com and clicked on “search” and
>instituted a search for the required device. Once the search was completed,
>I then clicked on “favorites” in the tool bar, and then clicked “add” in
>the favorites window when it opened. A name would appear that said “items
>matching [name of item]”, for instance “items matching [oxygen gauge]”, and
>I would then save this to the eBay folder I created. Now the next time I
>wanted to repeat the search for that same item, I’d simply go to the
>favorites, open the eBay folder and select the name for that item search
>and IExplorer would automatically jump to eBay and each time this was done
>a *new* search would be performed that would display new items that might
>have been placed on Ebay since the last time I searched. I would not have
>to repeat the cumbersome ritual of retyping the permutation of names of the
>item sought each time I repeated the search. It has sometimes taken me up
>to a year to find a rare and highly desired exotic item, but this technique
>makes it fairly effortless.
>
>William Alford
>walford@dbtech.net
>
>Tout comprendre c'est tout pardonner


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