Kharon
Contributor
Could you put a home CO detector into a plastic bag and vent gas from a tank into the bag directly onto the detector and detect CO? If not - why?
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
.. so while they may be able to detect the ppm of CO it won't display the number or go off at a set ppm. ...
You may wish to read some of the threads relating to CO. CO is something to worry about regardless of the source.what was said above. Unless you are filling tanks in your garage with a gas powered compressor, CO is really not anything worth worrying about
Take a look at this thread:http://www.scubaboard.com/forums/ne...-bad-air-originating-tank-not-compressor.htmlprofessional fill stations have to submit gas for analysis yearly to stay compliant and included in that is a CO measurement from the gas. Most things don't change, and with the amount of tanks that get filled yearly without CO testing each time I'm not worried about it. With one of the places I get fills the intake can be near exhaust from trucks if they are backing in so we don't run the compressor while the trucks are anywhere near the intake.
For a diver that isn't filling his tanks at a personal fill station and is getting it filled at a shop, I really wouldn't be concerned. If you are, then you shell out the $150-$200 for a CO analyzer and analyze your tanks. I built one into my O2 analyzer and it gets out both of the percentages so it isn't any extra work for me but I have yet to find anything in commercial fill stations above 5ppm which is well below the limit. I have a sensor on there because I have a gas powered RIX so I want to make sure that the intake despite being quite far away from the exhaust is not sucking anything in.
My point with that statement was the odds of you finding a level of CO that is above what is considered "normal limits" in a commercial filling station is extremely low to the point that while I always analyze my gas for O2, unless I have my analyzer with me, I don't usually worry about CO, nor do most divers
For reference, I believe current limits are 5ppm in Canada, 10ppm in US, and 15ppm in UK. I try to make sure everything is <5ppm since that is what the old standard was.