Hi James You could the www.gfginc.com their G450 appears to cover most of what you need. Regards David
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Wasnt there a link sent a few weeks ago by someone for a combined O2 CO2 monitor that seemed ideal? I think whoever it was was trying to get a bulk order going. Does anyone know what i mean? I cant find the mail and im looking for a decent monitor at the moment.
James On 26 April 2011 14:20, Smyth, Alec <Alec.Smyth@compuware.com> wrote: Agreed 100%. I've had a 10,000 ppm unit on a shelf for years, which is intended for monitoring buildings. The other day I wired it up and did a quick test. With no scrubber at all, just closing the air in the hatch, it took only 2 minutes to reach 10,000 ppm. With two people as Snoopy now carries, an instrument that reaches the top of its scale in one minute is obviously not going to be useful. So I am looking for a 5% range alternative. Unfortunately the purchase I was referring to below fell through, because I found out yesterday that the vendor had given me a price on the phone that turned out to be in error. Another consideration is the ruggedness, in particular resistance to excess humidity. I once bought a pair of Ohmeda oxygen meters, which are hospital equipment. They would appear to be exactly what you want on a sub. They are powered by dry cells, have a nice big backlit display, and both high and low alarms. But the first one lasted half an hour in the sub and simply went dead. The second did the same after only a few dives. I put together one working unit from the leftovers of the two, for now, but I am looking at something more moisture resistant. The nice thing about these little personal meters designed to be worn on your belt is that they're built to go into harsh environments, not a hospital room like fragile medical equipment.
I'll let you know what I settle on in the end. It's very easy to find good stuff. It's hard to find good stuff at affordable prices!
Alec
From:
owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org
[mailto:owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org]
On Behalf Of Alan James Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Which gases to detect? Hi Alex, I bought a cheap CO2 monitor wich only measures up to 10,000 ppm or 1%. I should be keeping levels well below this & will surface if I go any higher. NASA has a limit of 3% exposure for 1 hour, & in hind sight I wish I'd bought something with a greater range so I could push the limits if necessary or if I was entrapped, estimate when I would need to jump ship. So I'd advise checking it's range if you haven't already. Regards Alan
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