Ryan Wright
02-15-2008, 08:17
On Thu, Feb 14, 2008 at 4:42 PM, martingregg598 wrote:
> Come on Ryan, don't they make some super scientific mounting system out
> there where you work?
Probably, Marty. I should pickup some superconducting magnets, then I
could just "stick" it to the ceiling. 'course I'd have to add a tank
of LN2 to the coach to keep it up there... That could get interesting.
John:
On Thu, Feb 14, 2008 at 7:50 PM, John McGinnis wrote:
> I thought the CO detector was mounted close to the floor in those
> coaches that have the built in detector.
You're thinking of propane sensors. Propane is significantly heavier
than air. I don't know of many coaches with built in CO sensors, but
C3H8 sensors are common. On my PT-40, turning the sensor on/off also
turns the gas on/off, which is a nice safety feature in my opinion.
-Ryan
'86 PT-40 8V92
> Come on Ryan, don't they make some super scientific mounting system out
> there where you work?
Probably, Marty. I should pickup some superconducting magnets, then I
could just "stick" it to the ceiling. 'course I'd have to add a tank
of LN2 to the coach to keep it up there... That could get interesting.
John:
On Thu, Feb 14, 2008 at 7:50 PM, John McGinnis
> I thought the CO detector was mounted close to the floor in those
> coaches that have the built in detector.
You're thinking of propane sensors. Propane is significantly heavier
than air. I don't know of many coaches with built in CO sensors, but
C3H8 sensors are common. On my PT-40, turning the sensor on/off also
turns the gas on/off, which is a nice safety feature in my opinion.
-Ryan
'86 PT-40 8V92