Aotus
Contributor
Surprisingly some of them like the Analox had very stable sensors where you could store it for six months, turn it on again, bump check the unit with calibration gas and find that it was bang on. Initially I'd calibrate my Analox unit every 6 months but found that a one year calibration was fine. Unfortunately Analox has discontinued production of their CO E11 so unless you can find one real cheap I wouldn't go that route. The sensors will be available though until July 2016.
Here are the other options.
1) Oxycheq
Good unit which they claim does not need calibration which is not the case. I'd at least put some calibration on the sensor once a year in order to ensure it has not drifted and remains accurate.
OxyCheq - OxyCheq Expedition CO Analyzer w/ Alarm
The SensorCon was a unit previously available but the manufacturer has discontinued the scuba option. This unit's sensor was very sensitive to over-pressurization and one had to find a way to deliver gas at a flow of only 0.5 lpm to the sensor. Higher than that and one would get a false positive reading.
On my trip I used an Analox to double check the readings from my oxycheq. That's a shame to hear the Analox is out of production, it's a handy, super easy to use unit. Also, regarding the oxycheq. I called them about calibration before my trip because I ran out of bump gas too quickly and couldn't calibrate my new sensor. They DO advocate calibrating a new sensor, but in my case (1 day before my trip) recommended I calibrate the sensor for a zero/near-zero reading for air in an open clean area. I did that, but couldn't get it quite down to zero. When I tested good fills, the number stayed the same (<1) or went down to zero. When I found the bad fill it went right up to 20 and alarmed. So, I borrowed a friend's Analox and double checked a good fill and the suspect fill, they both matched - 0 and 20 respectively.
Lastly, that's a shame to hear the sensorcon tester isn't good. I bought one once and returned it before use because it felt cheap in my hand. The oxycheq is solid, but it's a shame that means there may not be a cheap option for a CO tester. Maybe every OW diver should start with some of those tester strips, so at least they have SOMETHING.