Carbon Monoxide detector

T

Terry Pinnell

Guest
Can anyone recommend a competitively priced replacement for my CO detector
that has prematurely reached the end of its life please?

It's a 'Model SF350EN', labeled 'British Gas' and its supplier, SF
Detection, want an exorbitant Ł30 to replace it. Seems daylight robbery to
me. They insist the whole unit needs replacing 'because the sensor dries
out'.

The sticker on mine says 'Replace by January 2012', and given that it was
only installed a couple of years ago I feel short-changed.

I'm tempted to try making one myself. I made a smoke alarm many years ago
which I vaguely recall used a gas sensor as its principal component. Are
CO sensors similar and easily obtained?

--
Terry, East Grinstead, UK
 
Terry Pinnell schrieb:
Can anyone recommend a competitively priced replacement for my CO detector
that has prematurely reached the end of its life please?

It's a 'Model SF350EN', labeled 'British Gas' and its supplier, SF
Detection, want an exorbitant Ł30 to replace it. Seems daylight robbery to
me. They insist the whole unit needs replacing 'because the sensor dries
out'.

The sticker on mine says 'Replace by January 2012', and given that it was
only installed a couple of years ago I feel short-changed.

I'm tempted to try making one myself. I made a smoke alarm many years ago
which I vaguely recall used a gas sensor as its principal component. Are
CO sensors similar and easily obtained?
Have a look here:

http://www.figarosensor.com/



HTH,


Jorgen
 
Terry Pinnell wrote:
Can anyone recommend a competitively priced replacement for my CO detector
that has prematurely reached the end of its life please?
If you go to that famous acution site, use advanced search to select UK only
and buy it now, you will find many of them under $20 (US) with free postage
to the UK. Obvoiusly the price is in UKP, but I since I have my currency set
to US dollars, they are automaticaly converted for me.

Last I looked, that's about 12 pounds 50.

Geoff.
--
Geoffrey S. Mendelson N3OWJ/4X1GM
Occam's Razor does not apply to electronics. If something won't turn on, it's
not likely to be the power switch.
 
In article <c9lhs6pt69ibo6eeqau7mfroi7a39gfggt@4ax.com>,
Terry Pinnell <terrypingm@DELETEgmail.com> wrote:

Can anyone recommend a competitively priced replacement for my CO detector
that has prematurely reached the end of its life please?

It's a 'Model SF350EN', labeled 'British Gas' and its supplier, SF
Detection, want an exorbitant Ł30 to replace it. Seems daylight robbery to
me. They insist the whole unit needs replacing 'because the sensor dries
out'.

The sticker on mine says 'Replace by January 2012', and given that it was
only installed a couple of years ago I feel short-changed.

I'm tempted to try making one myself. I made a smoke alarm many years ago
which I vaguely recall used a gas sensor as its principal component. Are
CO sensors similar and easily obtained?
If I thought I needed a CO detector - which I don't - I'd not shop for
one based on price. I don't get the logic, there. Aren't you intending
to trust your life to it? Or is this just a junior high school science
experiment?
 
"Geoffrey S. Mendelson" <gsm@mendelson.com> wrote:

Terry Pinnell wrote:
Can anyone recommend a competitively priced replacement for my CO detector
that has prematurely reached the end of its life please?

If you go to that famous acution site, use advanced search to select UK only
and buy it now, you will find many of them under $20 (US) with free postage
to the UK. Obvoiusly the price is in UKP, but I since I have my currency set
to US dollars, they are automaticaly converted for me.

Last I looked, that's about 12 pounds 50.

Thanks Geoff. Duly ordered one for Ł11.99, just under $20 USD:
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/CARBON-MONOXIDE-DETECTOR-ALARM-SAFETY-MIND-/250717658966?pt=UK_Safety_Alarms&hash=item3a5fefdf56

I could probably find a sensor for a fraction of that and make my own, but
life's too short!

--
Terry, East Grinstead, UK
 

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