Some cleaning products, alcohol, solvents, diesel will all trigger the alarm.
Just asking for a friend.If you've got night time flatulence that creates a nuisance alarm in your gas detector, I would say the alarm is the least of your worries. I would think your social life may be in jeopardy.
Results may vary!
Why? The place to locate them is beneath potential leaks, under the stove, near the bottom of the propane locker where the hose comes out, and such.I'm switching to a surface mount device and I'll install it below the battery isolators on my Beneteau
There is a way to find out. Expel faltulence in an old pickle jar large enough for the monitor to fit inside. Place the top on the jar. If the alarm is silent, your safe.Then I wondered if some nocturnal flatulence may set it off. Valid concern?
1) close to the floor with 12V access.Why? The place to locate them is beneath potential leaks, under the stove, near the bottom of the propane locker where the hose comes out, and such.
If you are concerned about hydrogen from batteries, hydrogen is lighter than air and will rise not sink.
That makes sense. For those of us who don't have Beneteuaus the description may not have made sense, this does.1) close to the floor with 12V access.
2) it's right next to the galley.
3) aft cabin has the propane line and shutoff valve.
4) for the win, I'm mostly concerned propane at night when I'm sleeping and the wind goes slack.
It certainly can be. please be creative.I'm hoping this is a joke thread.
You probably didn't see my earlier post regarding a similar concern:Propane is heavier than air. It will always find it's way to the lowest point that is can travel to. To place a detector in a cabin is counterproductive. you need to assess what the lowest point of travel is.
I wonder why they didn't go with ethylene for boats. it compresses to a liquid at ~500 psi and it's lighter than air. Seems like a no brainer. Eventually, I'll rip out the stove and just rely on electric.My propane sniffer has two remote sensors and also controls my solenoid so that if I get an alarm, it simultaneously shuts the tank solenoid. One sniffer is directly under the range so that if the flame goes out, it will trigger. The other sensor is on my engine bed which is below deck and near the lowest point but above any normal water levels.
The market is too small. That’s why CNG is disappearingI wonder why they didn't go with ethylene for boats. it compresses to a liquid at ~500 psi and it's lighter than air. Seems like a no brainer. Eventually, I'll rip out the stove and just rely on electric.
As stated, likely NO.nocturnal flatulence may set it off. Valid concern?