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True, but to the typical diver, who is untrained on CO risks, it seems pricey. I have a CooTwo, and Analox (no longer made), and a Sensorcon. I've been looking at a new, low cost model, but a 60 second tank bleed to test each tank is discouraging.Cheaper than a funeral
What do you use?
The De-ox unit will work. Home alarms aren't anywhere close to sensitive enough for tanks, but every home needs two or three.Any thoughts on these or will a decent household CO monitor suffice?
DE-OX SAFE Carbon monoxide analyzer – TEMC DE-OX® Digital Computers and Analyzers
DCI was the outcome.CO killed this diver, but the doctors released the official report giving decompression illness as the cause.
do we know he bailed out? the CO might have ben in his dil - i read it as co was found in his BO not he bailed out to a CO contaminated bottleDCI was the outcome.
CO was only found in the one bailout cylinder?
And if so, then what was the originating root cause, of the APD rebreather failing, that triggered the need for him to bailout to the CO contaminated bailout cylinder.....
Just to clarify, I have read and know about the effects of CO but I have never read specifically that it was also function of partial pressure.It's rare, but only takes one tank. Back when Padi required quarterly tests for compressors be done by a recognized lab, failure rates were 3%, which for a life & death risk is huge. Padi dropped the requirement tho. It's Russian Roulette except CO hits can be ignored, written off as travelers flu, talk hushed, deaths written off as drownings or in this case decompression illness as is the official doctors statement. It's rare that we learn the original trigger as we did from Apecks.
It gets boring checking tank after tank always getting zeroes, until you get your first tank failure, then you view it all as worthwhile.
It's a pain, depending on local resources and models you can buy & have serviced at home. Since no one else has crusaded about this, others who test just quietly protecting themselves but not spreading the word - it's bad for business you know and the industry, I have spent a lot more than I ever wanted to on this. I have two testers that I have serviced by the manufacturers - less often than required by fire departments and other industries with rules but I allow for sensor drift as I go, and a third that I can calibrate in the field - but it's not longer made.
The agencies are doing nothing as exposure is bad for business and the industry. They fight to keep recreational diving self regulated, so no rules. DAN has done much to make diving safer but is also doing nothing as again it's bad for business. DAN is non-profit aside from hidden profits made by some administrators, but very dependent on business as usual. Only in recent years have we had affordable technology to expose the risks and protect against them, but as long as hits & deaths are kept at accepted levels and can be ignored with official statements from doctors hiding the truths, the old problem continues. It's really discussing.
Extremely so, yes! That's the main risk. I don't know how much training you have had, but you taking diving seriously I can tell from you DIR status, yet no one has taught you the basics about CO. It's odorless, colorless, and tasteless, easy to produce in compressors, and hurts & kills divers, but it's also easy to get away with.
CO killed this diver, but the doctors released the official report giving decompression illness as the cause.
I use a CooTwo analyzer to test any nitrox tank I get, whether in the US or abroad. Thankfully I've never had a tank register as having CO in it, but why take the chance? And the CooTwo analyzer is nice because it's compact, easily travels, & gives me both nitrox percents & CO percents.
I usually calibrate once to twice daily & once every year send it off to have the sensors replaced.
No, CO was found in all the bailout cylinders allegedly at 45ppm and 30ppm in the diluent gas.DCI was the outcome.
CO was only found in the one bailout cylinder?
And if so, then what was the originating root cause, of the APD rebreather failing, that triggered the need for him to bailout to the CO contaminated bailout cylinder.....
It does not appear he bailed outdo we know he bailed out? the CO might have ben in his dil - i read it as co was found in his BO not he bailed out to a CO contaminated bottle