Sunday, August 8, 2010

CoStar 12M 12V Marine CO Alarm, No Relay Output



Product Description
 
Marine Carbon Monoxide Alarms Protect You Dangerous carbon monoxide gas is emitted from boat engines, auxiliary gasoline generators or propane generators and from propane stoves, water heaters or space heaters. Install a UL listed Costar 12M Marine Carbon Monoxide Alarm by Quantum Group. This is a 12 volt CO Alarm that meets UL 1275 standards for marine use. This carbon monoxide detector features a solid state infrared carbon monoxide gas sensor . COSTAR(R) products have the only Carbon Monoxide (CO) technology Tested False Alarm Free to common household products by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Reference: LBNL Report 40556 CAUTION: Carbon monoxide alarms respond only to CO gas at the sensor. Carbon monoxide gas can be present elsewhere in a boat. Protects a houseboat or watercraft. Approvals: UL Listed to Category Gas and Vapor Detectors and Sensors (FTAM). Sensor and Costar 12M both Made in USA. Approvals: UL-2075 Listed Extremely low current draw: Standby 20 5Amp, Alarm 605Amp, Trouble 30 5Amp No false alarms: Biotechnology-based infrared gas sensor created by genetic engineering. 12v DC: Direct wire to engine starting battery. No relay output: not for security systems. Sound output: 85 dB at 10 feet Non-latching Alarm: Automatic reset with dual relays Detection technology: Solid-state infra-red sensor with reservoir system. Operating environment: 32 degrees F to 120 degrees F; 15% to 95% RH Alarm response times: Below 35 ppm no alarm 70 ppm alarm within 60 to 240 minutes 150 ppm alarm within 10 to 50 minutes 400 ppm alarm within 4 to 15 minutes Signals: Normal operation: Red LED flashes every 30 seconds as power indicator. Alarm condition: Flashing red LED continuous with an 85 db alarm pulsing 2 seconds on; 4 seconds off. After 4 minutes, the alarm again sounds until the unsafe CO level is reduced. Trouble/service: Detector self tests every 10 minutes. Fault indicator: Beep and test button flashes twice every 30 seconds.